Kfc 






T DH IB 




I 




COLLEGE CALENDAR. 



1872. 

September 5, Thursday.— First term began. 
December 24, Tuesday. — First term ended. 

VACATION OP TWO WEEKS. 
1873. 

January 9, Thursday. — Second term began. 

January 30. Thursday. — Day of Prayer for Colleges. 

February 22, Saturday. — Anniversary of the Washington Literary Society. 

March 2(3, Wednesday. — Second term ends. 

VACATION OF TWO WEEKS. 

April 10, Thursday. — Third term begins. 

June 1G — 18. — Final Examination of the Senior Class. 

Jun. v 26— -JO. — Examination of the lower classes. 

June 29, Sunday, A. M. — Baccalaureate Sermon. 

June 29, Sunday, P. M. — Sermon before the Braiuerd Missionary Society. 

June 30, Monday. — Senior Class Day and Concert. 

July 1, Tuesday, A.M. — Examination for admission. 

July 1, Tuesday, A.M. — Reunion Meetings of the Literary Societies. 

July 1. Tuesday, P. M. — Meeting of the Alumni Association. 

July 1, Tuesday, Evening. — Oration before the Literary Societies. 

Julv 2, Wednesday. — Commencement Exercises. 

VACATION OF NINE WEEKS. 

September 3, Wednesday. — Examination for admission. 

September 4, Thursday. — First term begins. 

November 20. Wednesday. — Anniversary of Franklin Literary Society. 

December 24, Wednesday. — First term ends. 

V \< ATION OF 'i'\\ WEEKS. 
187-1. 

January 8, Thursday. — Second term bee-ins. 
March 26, Wednesday. Second term ends. 

\A< vno\ OF TWO WEEKS. 




It^fe- 






WIIIL1L3LA\M (Do(DA l ir t ir]E]L]L,IIDoIIDc 

PRESIDENT OE LAFAYETTE C< 







JUNE, 1873. 




EAST COLLEGE. 

C. L. STEVENS, 
M. R. ALEXANDER, H. E. RAESLY, 

FRANK B. REED, H. L. GRIFFIS. 



Easton, Pa., 

PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF 1876. 

M D C C C L X X 1 1 1 . 






Contents. \> 



Pagk 
Alumni Association 10 

Annual Reunion 40 

Baseball Clubs. 82 

Boat Clubs 85 

Brainerd Society 63 

Calendar Cover 2d page. 

Changes 5> 

Commencement Honors 64 

Croquet Clubs 4G 

Deaths in Alumni 4 

Eating Clubs 69 

Faculty 14 

Fraternities 41 

Franklin Society 35 

Freshmen 24 

Juniors 20 

Library 59 

Miscellany 87 

Miscellaneous Functionaries 16 

Musical Organizations 65 

Reading Room 58 

References 28 

Resident Graduates 17 

Salutatio 3 

Seniors 18 

Sophomores 22 

Summary 28 

Trustees 11 

Washington Society 29 



; 



By Bx chnngQ 
Lai age 



SALTJTATTO. 



With pleasant greetings we present to its readers the Miscellany, 
earnestly hopirg that its contents may serve our purpose in afford- 
ing to our fellow-students a convenient summary of information ; 
to our alumni a reminder of pleasant by-gones, and to our friends 
and patrons a view of the interior of college life such as cannot be 
found in our catalogues and other college publications. The class 
of v 76, the largest that ever entered our halls, offers this little work 
as a testimonial of its enterprise, and its interest in old Lafayette, 
The editors are sensible that their work will not escape criticism ; 
yet they will feel amply rewarded if their efforts shall in any way 
serve to bind closer the bonds of friendship for our Alma Mater r or 
to enhance her interests. 



§ato in tkt §Mwmi 

1871-2. 



-Hon. H. C. LONGNECKER, died at Allentown, Pa,, September lOtb, 1871. 
Brig.-Gen. ANDREW PORTER, died in Paris, January 5tli, 1872. 
J. a. WILLIAMSON", died at Bangor, Pa., February 21st, 1872. 
JOSEPH PATTERSON, died, in Westcbester County, N. Y., February, 1872. 
SETH S. LOUNSBERY, died at Bedford, N. Y„ April 35th, 1872. 
WM. OVERFIELD, died in Pbiladelpbia, April 27th, 1872. 
MAX. GOEPP, died in N.'Y. City, May 10th, 1872. 
WM/ : H. H. MICHLER, died in Philadelphia, May 20th, 1872. 
WM. M. McKEEN, died at South Easton, Pa., May 26th, 1872. 
J. B. W. ADAMS; died at Princeton, N. J., July 4th, 1872 
J. H. CUNNINGHAM, died at Oxford, Pa., 1872. 
WM. BA1RD, died at Reading, 1872. 
Rev. MOSES A. DEPUE, died at Easton, October 12th, 1872. 



CHANGES 



No period in the history of Lafayette College since its 
foundation has been so fruitful of important and gratifying 
changes as the one through which we have passed since the 
publication of the "Mieeoe" in 1871. Lafayette is moving on 
with a majestic, irresistible step. She is sure to take a front 
rank among American Colleges, and we are justly proud of her 
name. But to the changes. 

The work of beautifying the grounds — beautiful and pic- 
turesque by nature — began only in '70 and '71 — has been carried 
to a very gratifying degree of perfection. Walks have been laid 
out and constructed; roads and drives have been surveyed and 
macadamized; sewers and drains have been constructed ; shrub- 
bery and shade trees have been planted or pruned ; lawns and ter- 
races have been graded and sodded; the old wooden steps at 
the foot of the Hill— having fallen in an unpropitious hour — 
have been replaced by a series of stone steps, and gradually 
ascending walks, whose sides are protected and adorned by a 
substantial iron balustrade of a neat pattern, thus making a con 
tinuous walk from the foot to the top of the Hill ; a large granite 
monument, surmounted by a statue of a life-size soldier in full 
uniform, erected by the Alumni Association in memory of those 
who " died for the Union," crowns the summit of the Hill at the 
top of the winding walk ; finally, all rubbish and debris have been 
removed to their " own place." So much for change and im- 
provements in grounds. 



The progress in buildings has been more marked still. The 
old (i Refectory'* has been decomposed and the adjustable parts 
re-arranged into a commodious carpenter-shop, in the back- 
ground ; the former residences of Doctors Coffin and Eckard 
have been conveyed north-east to the block recently purchased 
by the College, on which is situated several o:her residences 
now occupied by students as dormitories, or by the families of 
members of the Faculty; a new residence has been erected for 
Prof, E. H. Barlow, who has made gratifying progress towards 
inhabiting it with a family; McKeen Hall, between Xewkirk 
and Martien, a large and commodious dormitory, has been built 
to accommodate some of the increased number of students ; 
West Wing — an extension of East College — has just been com- 
pleted, in which are rooms fitted up with improved furniture and 
apparatus for Prof. T. C. Porter in the department of Botany 
and Zoology, and on the first floor a spacious and elegant chapel. 
Important changes have been made also in the interior of the 
East College and in Jenks Hall, to the latter of which Prof. 
Moore has gone with all the apparatus connected with his 
department of Mechanics and Experimental Philosophy. 

The Pardee Building, erected at a cost of $200,000, exclusive 
of furniture and apparatus, crowns the improvements under this 
head. We can do no better than quote from the last catalogue: 

"It consists of one centre building five stories in height, fifty- 
five feet front and eighty-six deep, and two lateral wings, one at 
each side of the centre building, measuring sixty-one feet in length 
and thirty-one in width, four stories in height, including a mansard 
roof, the whole terminating in two cross wings forty-two feet 
front and eighty-four feet deep, and four stories in height. The 
entire length of front in a straight line is two hundred and fifty- 
six feet. The material is the Trenton brown stone, with trim- 
mings of light Ohio sand stone. It is to be heated throughout 
by steam. The first floor is mainly devoted to the study of 



raining and metallurgy ; the second contains the geological and 
mineralogical cabinets, a spacious auditorium, and smaller lecture- 
rooms, reading-rooms, and professors' studies. The third floor 
is devoted to the engineers. The right wing is occupied by the 
mining engineers. A large drawing-room occupies the lateral 
wing, while the cross wing embraces rooms for models and 
various professional purposes. The left wing is occupied by the 
engineers. The lateral wing comprises a drawing-room, and the 
cross wing is divided into rooms for lectures, working models, 
collections, and the like. On the fourth floor the same ample pro- 
visions have been made for the chemists. The centre building 
is divided into two large rooms, one for technical collections, the 
other an assistant's-room. The lateral wings are intended for 
quantitative and qualitative analysis. The cross wings at the 
extremity of the building are occupied by additional laboratories, 
lecture rooms, professors' studies, &c." 

The Scientific Department is thus placed on a good basis, 
and the students pursuing this course can begin to vie with the 
Classical. 

The large Reading-Room has been materially improved and 
beautified, and it, with the Library, Cabinet and Philosophical 
apparatus, has received many additions by rare and valuable con- 
tributions, and by purchase. 

In the courses of instruction we may notice the introduction 
of the Patristic Classics in Latin and Greek; the addition of Law 
to the number of elective studies ; the establishment of several 
valuable prizes in connection with the Patristic Course and 
Euglish, and the election of new Professors to meet the neces- 
sities of new studies and students. 

The Literary Societies have still open entertainments which 
are attended by large and appreciative audiences, attesting their 
increase in interest and merit. 



8 



The Lafayette Monthly ', published by the Senior Class, has 
been so improved as to take no indifferent place among college 
periodicals. 

While we are gratified in recording these unmistakable evi- 
dences of prosperity we must bow our heads in sorrow for the 
dead. From the students, Messrs. W. C. Cline of "73, E. A 
Heberling and C. W. Sausser of "75, have gone to their rest ; 
from the Trustees, Rev. Septimus Tustin, D.D., of Washington 
City, James McKeen, Esq., of Easton, and Joseph H. Scranton? 
Esq. of Scran ton ; from the Faculty, our beloved and revered 
Professor James Henry Coifin, LL. D. 

From the study of the wonders of the firmament below, our 
good professor has gone to enjoy the delights of the world 
beyond the stars ; from a contemplation of the luminaries of the 
universe into the presence of the King of Light. We need make 
no comments on a life so noble, so earnest, so dear as was his 
to all whoknew him. 

Fellow Students, Alumni, Friends, Trustees and Faculty, 
let us rejoice in the prosperity of Alma Mater; let us study 
her interests; let us guard her honor and her name; and may 
we all, when the great change comes, sit down at the right 
hand of our Heavenly Father. 







1| ' " 



10 






ALUMNI. 






The Alumni Society is composed of Graduates of the College and such 




of their classmates (who left College before graduation, 


and in good standing) 




as may have been elected. The annual meeting is held 


in the College Chapel 




on Tuesday afternoon preceding Commencement day. 






OFFICERS FOU 1872-3.. 






PRESIDED. 






Rev. SAMUEL A. GAYLEY, '47 


. .Colora, Md. 




VICE-PRESIDENT. 






Rev. JOHN BURROWS, '57 


..Milford, N. J. 




SECRETARY. 






Prof. SELDEN J. COFFIN, '58 


. .Easton, Pa. 




TREASURER. 






ELISIIA ALLIS, Esq., '56 


. . Easton, Pa. 




TEMPORARY CLE UK. 






0. JEWEL HARVEY, '71 


. , Wilkes Barre, Pa, 




• 

COMMITTEE ON REUNION. 






Prof. SELDEN J. COFFIN, '58 


. .Easton, Pa, 




Rev. GEO. L. SHEARER, '57 


. .New York. 




Rev. HENRY GREEN, D.D. '40 


. .Princeton, N. J. 




BENJAMIN F. STEM, Esq., '38 


. .Easton, Pa. 




ELISIIA ALLIS Esq , '50 . . 


. Easton. Pa. 




COMMITTEE ON EXAMINATIONS. 




Ki;v. SAMUEL A. GAYLEY, A.M., '47, 


. .Colora, Md. 




Rev. ANDREW TULLY, A.M., '37 


. .Beemerville, N. J. 




Hon. J. MORRISON HARMS, '38 


. . Baltimore, Md, 




Prof. JAMES F. KENNEDY. P. I)., '39 


. . Chanibersburg. 




Rev. GEORGE D. STEWART, D.D., '45 


. . Omaha. Nebraska. 




HORATIO G.FISHER, A.M., '55 


. .Huntingdon. 




ABliAM A. SMITH, A.M , M.D., '08 

















11 




TRUSTEES. 




Hon. JAMES POLLOCK, LL.D., President, 


Philadelphia. 


Rev. S. M. ANDREWS, D.D., Secretary, 


Doylestown. 


Rev. DAVID J. WALLER, 


Bloomsburg. 


Rev. ROBERT HAMILL, D.D., 


Boalsburg. 


WILLIAM C. LAWSON, 


Milton. 


MATTHEW HALE JONES, 


Easton. 


McEVERS FORMAN, 


East on. 


Rev. SAMUEL F. COLT, 


Laporte. 


Rev. AARON H. HAND, D.D., 


Palisades, N.Y. 


Rev. WILLIAM C. CATTELL, D.D., 


Easton. 


Hon. JAMES ROSS SXOWDEN, 


Philadelphia. 


Rev. MILO J. IIICKOK, D.D., 


ScraLton. 


A. PARDEE, 


Hazleton. 


ALFRED MARTIEN, 


Philadelphia. 


Rev. J. H. MASON KNOX, D.D., 


Philadelphia. 


JOHN F. McCOY, 


New York City, 


BARTON H. JENKS, 


Philadelphia. 


THOMAS BEAVER, 


Danville. 


JOSEPH H. SCRANTON, * 


Scranton. 


JOHN WELLES HOLLENBACK, 


Wilkes Barre. 


WILLIAM DORRIS, 


Huntingdon. 


MORRIS PATTERSON, 


Philadelphia. 


JOHN CURWEN, M.D., 


Harrisbnrg. 


WILLIAM ADAMSON, 


Philadelphia. 


THOMAS DICKSON, 


New York City. 


THOMAS L. McKEEN, 


Easton. 


TREASURER, 




SAMUEL L. FISLER, A.M., 


Easton, Pa. 


* Died June, 1872. 






OBSERVATORY. 



Engraved expressly for the Miscellany 







(§>-"%* 



PHILOSOPHICAL HALL. 



Engraved expressly for the Miscellany. 



14 

MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY. 



Rev. WILLIAM C. CATTELL, D. D., President, 

AND PROFESSOR OF MENTAL AND MORAL PHILOSOPHY. 

TRAILL GREEN, M. D., LL.D., 

ADAMSON PROFESSOR OF GENERAL AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY. 

JAMES HENRY COFFIN, LL. D. * 

PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY. 

FRANCIS ANDREW MARCH, LL. D., 

PROF. OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND COMPARATIVE PHILOLOGY. 

Rev. JOHN LEAMAN, A.M., M.D., 

PROFESSOR OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY AND ANATOMY. 

Rev. LYMAN COLEMAN, D.D., 

PROF. OF LATIN AND OF BIBLICAL AND PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY. 

Rev. THOMAS C. PORTER, D.D., 

PROFESSOR OF BOTANY AND ZOOLOGY. 

(Jessie Chamberlain Professorship of Botany.) 

AUGUSTUS ALEXIS BLOOMBERGS, A.M., 

PROFESSOR OF MODERN LANGUAGES. 

ROBERT BARBER YOUNGMAN, A.M., 

PROFESSOR OF THE GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. 

FREDERICK PRIME, Jr., A.M., 

PROFESSOR OF METALLURGY AND MINERALOGY. 

E. HUBBARD BARLOW, A.M., 

PROFESSOR OF RHETORIC, ELOCUTION AND OF PHYSICAL CULTURE, 

ROSSITER W. RAYMOND, Ph.. IX, 

LECTURER ON MINING GEOLOGY. 

SELDEN JENNINGS COFFIN, A.M.. 

PROFESSOR OF APPLIED MATHEMATICS. 

* Died Feb. 6th, 1873. 



15 



JAMES W. MOORE, A.M., M.D., 

PROFESSOR OP MECHANICS AND EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY. 

EDWARD STEWART MOFFAT, A.M., M.E., 

LECTURER IN THE DEPARTMENT OP MINING. 

JUSTUS MITCHELL SILLIMAN, M.E., 

PROFESSOR OF MINING ENGINEERING AND GRAPHICS. 

JOSEPH G. FOX, C.E., 

PROFESSOR OF CIVIL AND TOPOGRAPHICAL ENGINEERING. 

CHARLES McINTIRE, A.M., M.D., 

ADJUNCT PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY. 

ROBERT FRAZER, Jr., A.M., 

ADJUNCT PROFESSOR OF CIVIL ENGINEERING, 

WALTER QUINCY SCOTT, A.M., 

TUTOR' IN GREEK AND LATIN. 

JOSEPH JOHNSTON HARDY, A.B., 

TUTOR IN MATHEMATICS. 

DAVID BENNETT KING, A.B,, 

TUTOR IN LATIN. 

WILLIAM BAXTER OWEN, A. B., 

TUTOR IN GREEK. 

JOHN MEIGS, A.B., 

TUTOR IN LATIN AND GREEK. 

JEFFERSON SNYDER, A.B., 

TUTOR IN MODERN LANGUAGES. 

WM. SEMPLE SWEENY, A.B., 

ASSISTANT IN CHEMISTRY. 



16 



Miscellaneous Functionaries. 



SAMUEL L. FISLER, A. M., 

SUPERINTENDENT OF COLLEGE GROUNDS. 

ENOCH BENSON, 

COLLEGE BELL RINGER. 

WM. H. WEAVER, 
JANITOR. 

JOHN DE CLERCQ, 

ASSISTANT JANITOR. 

RUDOLPH MEISSNER, 

SUPERINTENDENT OF THE WORKING FORCE. 

CHARLES GREEN, 

BARBER AND GATHERER OF OLD CLOTHES. 



MUSIC AT COMMENCEMENT WEEK BY DODWORTH'S BAND, 

NEW YORK CITY. 



SENIOR CLASS PHOTOGRAPHER, 

F. GUTEKUNST, No. 712 Arch Street, Philadelphia. 



17 



STUDENTS. 



RESIDENT GEADUATES, 



NAMES. GRADUATION. 

John Fox, A.B., Lafayette, 1872. 

Easton, South Sixth Street. 

Chas. Albert Sandt, A.B., Lafayette, 1872. 

Eastou, 187 Northampton St. 



SPECIAL STUDY . 

Philology. 
Blackstone. 



18 




i 

i 

! 

1 
1 


8BNIOB8. ' 






S \ Ik 




. 


HKt- ^» 






; -, .. ■ ; 


jflBF mm <%|0 






MMtf£' f 




■ 


% y ^ 






^ESlp^ 






@{fiars. 






T. C. ENGLISH President. 






G. L. HUGGINS Vice-President. 




E. N. BARRETT Secretary. 






W. H. SCHUYLER Treasurer. 






W. M. SHANKS Chaplain. 






Bombers. 






Frederick Henry Adams, Vergennes, Vt., 82 Spring Gar. 


St. 


William Clarke Alexander, Lewistown, 


47 


E. 


William Caldwell Anderson, Youngsiown, 


23 


N. 


Eleazer Jacob Angle, Rummerfield, 


7 


P. 


Lloyd Paxton Appelman, Bloomsburg, 


31 


E. 


Stephen Goodyear Barnes, * Perth Amboy, N. J., 


37 


E. 


Edward Newell Barrett, Bedford, N. Y., 


17 


N. 


Emery Sliepperd Barrick, Croton, N. J., 


14 


B. 


Enoch Benson, Bridgeton, N. J., 


37 


E. 


Franklin Pierce Billmeyer, Bloomsbnrg, 


36 E. 


Charles Edward Burns, Duncannon, 


10 McK, 


Milton Lewis Cook, Merry all, 


W. 


!'. 


Albert Hatch Davidson, Augusta, (ia.. 


J3 E. 



19 



SENIORS— Continued. 




John George Diefenderfer, 


Allentown, 


lOMcK 


Theodore Cowan English, 


Liberty Corner, N. J., 


13 E. 


Thomas Crawford Galbreath, 


Pylesville, Md., 


38 E 


George Lane Huggins, 


New York City, 


22 E 


Wesley Middleton Hyde, 


Baltimore, Md., 


15 B 


Hathaway Kemper, 


Dayton, Ohio, 


48 E 


Daniel McKinley Kennedy, 


Chambersburg, 


27 E 


Edward Mathias Killough, 


Harrisburg, 


12 E 


Cyrus Knecht, 


Easton, 


7 P 


George Mortimer Lewis, 


Wyalusing, 


21 E 


Wiliam Raby Little, 


West Chester, 


12 E 


Thomas McNinch, 


Potts Grove, 


13McK 


Ambrose Kirtland Michler, 


San Francisco, Cal., 174 North'n St 


John Albert Mouk, 


Columbia, 


34 E 


Alexander Ross Read, 


Clearfield, 


9 N 


Henry Rumer, 


Wilmington, Del., 


20 B 


John Milton St. Clair, 


Indiana, 


45 E 


Isaac Peter Schaeffer, 


Fleetwood, 


22 E 


William Henry Schuyler, 


Bloomsburg, 


32 E 


Walter Moffat Shanks, 


New York City, 


4 W 


Joseph Rosenbery Shimor, 


Martin's Creek, 


9 M 


Albert Peter Silver, 


Glenville, Md., 


47 E 


Lewis Frank Sprenger, 


Kutztown, 


27 McK. 


Herman Al ricks Stees, 


Mifninburg, 


12 B 


Wilson Cunningham Sterling, 


New Derry, 


13 B 


Henry McDonald Struble, 


Pleasant Valley, N. J., 


28 McK. 


Nathaniel Taylor, 


Mooresburg, 


13 McK. 


Levi Ellmaker Waller, 


Bloomsburg, 


32 E. 


Joseph Gilliard Williamson, Jr., 


.Sidney, N. J., 


10 P. 


Seniors 




.42. 



20 



I1HIOE 




©ffiroa. 

S. L. STIVER President. 

J. W. B. BAUSMAN Vice-President. 

E. I. DAVIES Secretary. 

W. C. BOVARD Treasurer. 

S. R. WARRENDER Chaplain. 

G. R. VANREED Poet. 

J. R. WILLIAMS Orator. 

P; C. EVANS Historian. 

I. P. PARDEE Marshal. 



Member*. 



Henry Aller Aller, 
George Bonbright Anderson, 
John Watts Baer Bailsman, 
William Hanna Bayless, 
William Crawford Bovard. 
Elijah Rittenhou.se Case, 



Mount Pleasant, N. J., 


11 N 


Youngstovvn, 


21 N 


Lancaster, 


is McK 


Glenville, Md.. 


34 E 


Brady, 


8 P 


Frenchtown, N. J., 


28 McK 







21 






JUNIORS— Continued. - 






Levi Welts Case, 


Frenchtown, N. J., 


23 McK. 




Robert Lorenzo Clark, 


Chestnut Level, 


23 McK. 




Enoch. Israel Davies, 


Phillipsburg, N. J. 


,. 15 McK. 




Arthur Granville Dewalt, 


Kutztown, 


22 McK. 




Latimer Banks Doty, 


Mifflintown, 


10 N. 




Penell Cornbe Evans, 


Easton, 


28 E. 




Francis George Fisher, 


Standing Stone, 


11 McK. 




Angus Lewis Fullerton, 


Chillicothe, Ohio, 


12 P. 




James Buchanan Gilfillan, 


Parkesburg, 


17 McK. 




Robert Henderson Hamilton, 


Altoona, 


12 N. 




Jacob Butz Heller, Jr., 


Easton, 


27 McK. 




Clinton Hilliard, 


Easton, 


14 E. 




George Mover Holt, 


South Easton, 


Canal Street. 




Frederick Emanuel Keim, 


Easton, 


28 E. 




Clay Kemble, 


Philadelphia, 


8 M 




William McKeen Miller, 


Port Jervis, N. Y., 


18 McK. 




Charles Joseph Nourse, 


Washington, D. C, 


6 M. 




Nathaniel Marion Orr, 


Wilkes Barre, 


20 McK. 




Israel Piatt Pardee, 


Hazleton, 


12 P. 




Sylvanus Rockafellow Queen, 


Mount Pleasant, N. 


J., 18 B. 


1 


Samuel Miller Riley, 


Montrose, 


12 M. 


\ 


Emilius Kitchell Sayre, 


Monticello, Mo., 


6 M. 




Joseph Alexander Snively, 


Greencastle, 


27 E. 




Samuel Sprecher, 


Lancaster, 


11 M. 




Samuel Luther Stiver, 


Potter's Mills, 


23 E. 


, 


John Franklin Stonecipher, 


Palmers ville, 


23 E. 




George Robert Van Reed, 


Reading, 


22 N. 


1 


Samuel Robert Warrender, 


Stapleton, N. Y., 


17 B. 




Ethan Allen Weaver, 


Easton, 


2 N. 




John William Pomeroy Weston, 


Brooklyn, N. Y. 


14 M. 




John James Williams, 


White Lake, N. Y., 


14 E. 




John Robert Williams, 


Frenchtown, N. J., 


16 B. 




Juniors 




38 







22 




©Stars. 



H. H. JACKSON President. 

C. H. LEE Vice-President. 

A. E. TURNER Secretary. 

G. E. SILVER Treasurer. 

W. F. BAINBRIDGE Marshal. 

J. W. WALK Poet. 

J. G. GIBBS Orator. 

W. E. THOMAS Historian. 



Walter Frederick Bainbridge, 

Samuel Austin Bessen, 

Kersey Smith Blake, 

Joseph Brakeley, 

Charles Bransby, 

Henry Briton Buckwalter, 

Henry Scarborough Carey, 

Thomas Craig, 

Jesse Van Auken Craighead, 

John William Creveling, 

William Walter Dale, 



Mount Holly, N. J. 51 E. 

Everettstown, N. J. 16 B. 

Granville, 111. 9 P. 

Bordentown.N. J. Northampton St. 
Bogota, South America, 14 McK 



West Chester, 

Taylorsville, 

Pittston, 

New York City, 

Bloomsbury, N. J. 

Franklin, 



16 E. 
24 E. 
58 E. 
10 M. 
McK. 
McK, 









23 






SOPHOMORES— Continued. 






Andrew Fine Derr, 


Wilkes Barre, 


9 McK. 




Henry Mathews Du Bois, 


Doylestown, 


1 P. 




Montgomery Evans, 


Limerick Station, 


16 E. 




Howard Fackenthall, 


Riegelsville, 


5 W. 




Samuel Wilson Fleming, 


Harrisburg, 


12 M. 




James Gilbert Gibbs, 


Norwalk, Ohio, 


60 E. 




William Henry Harrison, 


Easton, 


Lafayette Park. 




John Roberts Henderson, 


Middlebrook, Md. 


24 N. 




Willis Stanley Hetrick, 


Easton, 


21 E. 




James Henry Hicks, 


Wyoming, 


49 E. 




Zacharias Christman Hoch, 


Kutztown, 


1 McK. 




Joseph Ellis Hoffman, 


Danville, 


35 E. 




Herbert Hallet Jackson, 


Brooklyn, N. Y. 


24 McK. 




Nicholas Henry Larzelere, 


Whitehallville, 


McK. 




Charles Henry Lee, 


Hanover, Ind., 


20 E. 




John Morgan Lewis, 


Pittston, 


49 E 




Arthur Millington McComb, 


Dayton, Ohio, 


48 E. 




Rollin Scott Manley. 


East Canton, 


33 E. 




Charles Howard Milligan, 


Greenville, Tenn. 


59 E. 




David W. Nevin, 


Shippensburg, 


Bushkill St. 


• 


Henry Emmanuel Otto, 


West Chester, 


19 McK. 




Hamilton H. Pollock, 


Callensburg, 


21 McK. 




Albert Andrews Richards, 


Buck Valley, 


17 McK. 




Richard Anderson Roberts, 


New York City, 


College Hill. 




George Manville Robison, 


East Springfield, 


60 E. 




John Elliot Ross, 


Mahanoy City, 


13 M. 




Thomas Dolan Sayre, 


Monticello, Mo., 


6 M. 




Charles Payson Gurley Scott, 


Washington, D. C 


8. McK. 




Joseph Whitfield Scroggs, 


Greenfield, Mo., 


2 McK. 




Samuel Wilson Shadle, 


Reedville, 


35 E. 




Michael Jonas Shalter, 


Tuckertown, 


22 McK. 




William Clayton Shipman, 


Easton, 


43 E. 




George Edward Silver, 


Church ville, Md, 


19 E. 




William Finney Silver, 


Churchville, Md., 


19 E. 




Edmund Dell Smith, 


Pottsville, 


9 McK. 




John Charles Stuckert, 


Warrington, 


1 P. 




Andrew Jackson Sullivan, 


Blackwood, N. J., 


24 McK. 




Welling Evan Thomas, 


Stevensville, 


33 E. 




George Cyrus Tilden, 


Brooklyn, N. Y., 


12 McK. 




Arthur Everett Turner, 


Parkesburg, 


30 E. 




James Wilson Walker, 


Philadelphia, 


19 N. 




Lewis Burd Walker, 


Pottsville, 


3 McK. 




Sophomores. . 




52 

I 



24 



FEIiHilll 




©fibers, 

J. A. COVODE, President. 

W. C. STULL, Vice-President. 

H, E. RAESLY, . . . . Secretary. 

W. H. McCURDY, Treasurer. 

M. R. ALEXANDER, Chaplain. 

MAYNARD BIXBY, Marshal. 

MILTON R. ALEXANDER, Poet. 

J. S. FREEMAN, Orator. 

A. H. R. GUILEY, Historian. 

IfUmkrs. 

Joseph Kirkwood Alexander, Moundsville, W, Va. 9 P. 

Milton Rotlirock Alexander, Lewistown, 58 E. 

Edward Harrison Anderson, Bedford, 85 McE. 

Clarence Newton Andrews, Easton, 94 Spring Garden St. 

Joseph Howell G. Andrews. Phillipsburg, N. J. 18 B. 

George Albert Angle, Roxburg, N. J. M, 



1 

1 


25 






FRESHMEN— Continued. 






Carlos Enrique Arrnijo, 


CUibuabua, Mexico 


19 McK. 




Horace Snyder Bachman, 


East on, 


60 N. 3d St. 




James Bacon, 


Osceola, 


4 McK. 




Isaac Barber, 


Pbillipsburg, N. J. 


3 McK. 




George Gilbert Barnes, 


Cburcbville, Md. 


15 E. 




Allen Peter Berlin, 


Cberryville, 


8 McK- 




Cbarles Welles Bixby, 


Wyalusing, 


26 McK. 




Maynard Bixby, 


Wyalusing, 


26 McK. 




Silas Belden Brown, 


May's Landing, N. 


J. 19 B. 




Harry Clay Bubb, 


Montoursville, 


57 E. 




Jobn Alfred Buclianan, 


Honeybrook, 


13 P. 




Robert Finney Caldwell, 


Lawrenceville, N. J. 4 W. H. 




George H. Campbell, 


Woodbury, N. J. 


20 E. 




John Waugh Clendenin, 


Mecbanisburg, 


10 M. 




Edward Rutherford Conant, 


Elizabetb, N. J. 


36 E. 




Wilking Britton Cooley, 


Easton, 


52 Northampton St. 




Frederick George Corbin, 


New Milford, 


11 McK. 




Jobn Alexander Covode, 


Lockport, 


25 McK. 




Augustus Creveling, 


Wasbington, N. J . 


82 Spring Gard. St. 




William Franklin Dannebower, 


Tylersport, 


7 McK. 




Charlton Kirby Davis, 


Belvidere, N. J. 


4W. H. 




Ira Dumont, 


Pbillipsburg, N. J. 


14 P. 




i Jobn Armstrong Dunlap, 


Newville, 


50 E. 




| Harry Emmons, 


Wilmington, Del. 


2 McK. 




Lutber Melick Fine, 


Musconetcong, N. 


J. 5 W. 




Jobn Slougb Freemann, 


Centre Point, 


46 E. 




Jobn Bennett Fuller, 


Montoursville, 


36 E. 




j Jobn Torrey Fuller, 


Wilkes Barre, 


L74 Northampton St. 




Cbester Fulmer, 


Easton, 


43 E. 




James Gayley, 


Colora, Md. 


5 McK. 




J Jacob Bruner Grab am, 


Honeybrook, 


13 P. 




j Henry Lewis Griffis, 


Montrose, 


14 M. 




Augustus Hprper Raguel Guiley, 


Soutb Easton, 


2N. 




Tbomas Abraham Horn Hay, 


Easton, 


127 Northampton St. 




Jobn King Hays, Jr., 


Williamsport, 


57 E. 




Alfred Heebner, 


Port Carbon, 


3 McK. 




Jobn Burke Hendry, 


Easton, 


26 N. 4th St. 




j William McMeens Hepburn, 


Williamsport, 


41 N. 3d St. 




j Jobn Henry Hosie, 


T am aqua, 


41 N. 3d St. 




Everett Newell Huggins, 


New York City, 


85 Bushkill St. 




Forrest Hulings, 


Emlenton, 


Bushkill St. 




Willis Martin Hunt, 


Clarksville, N. J. 


10 P. 




Jobn Coleman Irwin, 


Indiana, Pa. 


College Hill. 




1 Harry Tilge Jobnson, 


Pennsgrove, N. J. 


85 Bushkill St. 











26 






FRESHMEN— Continued. 






Matthew Hale Jones, Jr., 


Easton, 


87 Centre Square. 




John Franklin Keller, 


Lancaster, 


14 P. 




James Kepple, 


Congruity, 


College Hill. 




Alexander Lowry Kinkead, 


Hopewell, 


46 E. 




William Philip Kinsey, 


South Easton, 


56 E. 




Henry Rush Koch, 


Bath, 


8 McK. 




Henry Reichenbach Kraber, 


York, 


62 Bushkill St. 




Edwin Houston Lamberton, 


Franklin, 


27 McK. 




Asa Leard, 


Cowansville, 


College Hill. 




Thomas William Leard, 


Cowansville, 


College Hill. 




Robert Fullerton Lind, 


Mansfield, Ohio, 


58 Buskill St. 




John Thomas Lloyd, 


Cor wen. North Wales, Lafayette Park. 




Arthur Coffin Logan, 


Scranton, 


IIP. 




Harry Vannuys Logan, 


Scranton, 


11 P 




Albert Miller Long, 


Pittsburgh, 


60 Bushkill St,' 




Henry Long, 


Honeybrook, 


22 N. 




G rover Stout Lowe, 


Somerville, N. J. 


15 E. 




John Moore McCahan, 


Burkeville, Va. 


7 W. 




Oliver Campbell McClure, 


Thurlow, 


3 W. H. 




William Henry McCurdy, 


Slate Hill, 


38 E. 




William Cummins McKnight, 


Chambersburg, 


45 E. 




Abram McMurtrie, 


Belvidere, N. J. 


20 McK. 




Henry Stephen Magraw, 


Colora, Md. 


59 E. 




John Edwin Mann, 


Fairfield, N. C. 


4 W. H. 




Oliver Hoffman Melcher, 


Kintnersville, 


9 W. 




Henry Daniel Michler, 


Easton, 


Lafayette Park. 




W'illiam Paul Mifflin, 


McDonough, Del. 


10 E. 




James Monaghan, 


Sedalia, Mo. 


30 E. 




Samuel Black Neilson, 


New Bloomfield, 


50 E. 




Austin Craig Norwood, 


Emerson, Iowa. 


20 E. 




Clearfield Park, 


Bloomsburg, N. J. 


5 McK. 




Edward Peacock, 


Lancaster, 


11 M. 




William Alexander Petrikin, 


Muncy, 


51 E. 




John Richard Pfouts, 


Jersey Shore, 


62 Bushkill St. 




John Phillips, 


Alexandria, 


24 E. 




William Lewis Plack, 


Altoona, 


Prof. Fox. 




John Porter, 


Easton , 


Prof. Porter. 




Henry Emery Raesly, 


Mount Bethel, 


14 E. 


. 


George Montgomery Rea, 


Hackettstown, N. J 


62 Bushkill St. 




Brittaiu Magargle Reed, 


Lairdsville, 


56 E. 




Frank B. Reed, 


Clearfield, 


16 E- 




James Reese Schick, 


Easton, 


85 Bushkill St. 




George Eyster Scott, 


Huntingdon; 


11 McK. 




Nicholas Scott, 


Cincinnati, Ohio, 


60 Bushkill St. 


. 



27 



FRESHMEN— Continued. 



Herbert Francis Seip, 
Wilson Seiner, 
John Jay Serfass, 
Wyn Reeves Sewell, 
John Graff Shields, 
Porter William Shimer, 
Dean Finley Smith, 
Cyrus Lee Stevens, 
William Clark Stull, 
Israel Henry Supplee, 
John Bascom Taylor, 
Horace Frank Weeks, 
George Brakely White, 
Victor Piollet Wierman, 
James Carter Wright, 
Benjamin Booth Wynkoop, 
Charles Oliver Young:, 



Easton, 

Kintnersville, 

Easton, 

Allegheny, 

Blairsville, 

Easton, 

Philadelphia, 

Stevensville, 

Milford, N. J. 

West Haverford, 

Wyalusing, 

Philadelphia, 

Belvidere, N. J. 

Harrisburg, 

Mifflintown, 

Bellevue, Iowa, 

Port Jervis, N. Y. 



81 Centre Square. 

9 W. 

183 Northampton St. 

8M. 

8 P. 

Lafayette Park. 

9P, 

6 W. H. 

6 W. 

12 McK. 

4McK. 

13 M. 

11 McK. 

174 Northampton St. 

14 P. 

125 Bushkill St. 

Lafayette Park. 



Freshmen Ill 



28 



SUMMARY. 



RESIDENT GRADUATES 2 



UNDER GRADUATES. 



Total. 



f Seniors 42 

J Juniors 38 

I Sophomores 53 

I Freshmen HI 



fvejsidewce. 



VERMONT 1 

NEW YORK 13 

NEW JERSEY 35 

PENNSYLVANIA 158 

DELAWARE 3 

MARYLAND 10 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 2 

VIRGINIA 1 

WESTVIRGINIA 1 

NORTH CAROLINA 1 



GEORGIA 


1 


TENNESSEE 


1 


OHIO 


6 


INDIANA 


1 


ILLINOIS r 1 


IOWA 


2 


MISSOURI 


4 


CALIFORNI \. 


1 


MEXICO 


1 


SOUTH AMERICA 


1 



WALES 2 



E. 

W. 

B. 

N. 



^tfmmt$. 



East College. 
West College. 
Blair Hall. 
Newkirk Hall. 



M. 
P. 
McK. 

w. n. 



[Martien Hall. 
Powell Hall. 
McKeen Hall. 
IWhite House. 



Seniors.— N. TAYLOR. Juniors.— E. I. DAVIES. 

Sophomores.— W. E. THOMAS. 
Freshmen.— 1. Tutor HARDY. 2. Tutor KING. 



8. Tutor MEIGS. 



4. Tutor SNYDER. 



E 



i 



s& 







1 




31 


WASHINGTON LITERARY SOCIETY. 


ESTABLISHED 1830. 






©ffirtrs : 


i 

S. G. BARNES 




.President. 


J. F. STONECIPHE 
•! H. C. CAREY, 

e 

A. J. SULLIVAN, - 1 

i 


R, 


i 

r 


Vice-Presidents. 


J. B. FULLER, 


-. 




Secretaries. 


C.L.STEVENS, J 






W. E. THOMAS 




Treasurer. 


CHAS. BRANSBY, V 




Librarians. 


H. E. RAESLY, ) 






S.G.BARNES 

MM 




. .' Poet. 


WM. SHANKS 




Orator. 


A. R. READ, ) 
S. L. STIVER, J 

1 






Z i W9^ ... 






'73. 


| W. C. Anderson, 




T. C. Galbreath, 


E. J. Angle, 




D. M. Kennedy, 


S. G. Barnes, 




G. M. Lewis, 


E. N. Barrett, 




A. R. Read, 


E. Benson, 




J. M. St. Clair, 


M. L. Cook, 




W. M. Shanks, 


T. C. English, 

! 




W. C. Sterling. 

| 





32 






REGULAR MEMBERS— Continued. 






'74. 






G. B. Anderson, 




J. B. Heller, 




J. W. B. Bausman, 




F. E. Keim, 




W. C. Bovard, 




N. M. Orr, 




R. L. Clark, 




J. A. Snively, 




E. I. Davies, 




S. L. Stiver, 




A. G. Dewalt, 




J. F. Stonecipher, 




P. C. Evans, 




J. J. Williams, 






E. A. Weaver. 






'75. 






K. S. Blake, 




H. H. Jackson, 




Joseph Brakely, 




R. S. Manley, 




Charles Bransby, 




D. W. Nevin, 




H. C. Carey, 




A. A. Richards, 




M. H. Du Bois, 




J. W. Scroggs, 




M. Evans, 




M. J. Shalter, . 




J. G. Gibbs, 




W. C. Shipman, 




W. H. Harrison, 




E. D. Smith, 




W. S, Hetrick, 




A. J. Sullivan, 






W. E. Thomas. 






'76. 






C. E. Armijo, 




J. F. Keller, 




J. Bacon, 




A. Leard, 




A. P. Berlin, 




T. W. Leard, 




C. W. Bixby, 




J. T. Lloyd, 




M. Bixby, 




G. S. Lowe, 




H. C. Bubb, 




W. H. McCurdy, 




W. C. Cooley, 




W. C McKnight, 




J. A. Covode, 




W. P. Mifflin, 




A. Creveling, 




J. Monaghan, 

to i 




E. H. Emmons, 




A. C. Norwood, 




J. B. Fuller, 




J. Porter, 




F. A. H. Hay, 




H. E. Raesly, 




F. Hulings, 




G. E. Scott, 




.7. C. Irwin, 




C. L. Stevens, 






J. B. Taylor. 





JRlrarg HJemtrers. 

'73. 

A. H. Davidson, E. M. Killougli. 
'74. 

C. Hilliard, C. Kemble, 

A. L. Fullerton, S. M. Riley, 

W. McK. Miller, S. Spreclier. 

'76. 

F. B. Reed, J. H. Supplee, 

G. B. White. 



THE WASHINGTON DEBATING CLUB. 



QUID NUNC ? 

" Intelligentia, Logica et Oratorio,. 



©fitters ; 



T. C. GALBREATH President. 

w. c. Mcknight Vice-President. 

T. W. LEARD Secretary. 

J. W. SCROGGS Treasurer. 



INAUGURAL EXERCISES, 

FIRST TERM. 

Wednesday Evening, September loth, 1873. 

Orator M. EVANS. 

Poet C. LEE STEVENS. 



34 


■ 


ANNUAL ENTERTAINMENT 

1 




OF THE 




^tfaishmgton Iptetmy Mtetg, 




Saturday Evening ; February 22a 1 . 18 '75. 




ORDER OF EXERCISES. 




Music Select Ion- from " Lucrezia Borgia" Donnizetti. 




INVOCATION. 




Music "Softly Over the Rippling Waters" Thomas. 




Address of Welcome by the President, E. J. Angle. 




Oration " The Martyr Spirit" Alfred P. Reid. 


Music Mazurka — " Fur Dich" .... Faust. 




P.vpeb ..." Chips from Our Workshop," Editors \ f g; ^™; Jr 




Music Galop — "Ida" Faust. 




Spanish Rehearsal Ch ^rles Bransby. 




Music ." Strida la Vampa." Verdi. 


: 


1 r 

Poem 'Columbia, Hail" S. L. Stiver. 




Music " Viona Waltz" Coates. 




Essay. " The Revised System of Society" E. N. Barrett. 




Music Schneeo-lockchen Polka Faust. 




Paper.. . ." Chips from Our Workshop," Editors -j gQ^™g **' 




Music " Serenade to Ida" Wiegand. 




Oration " Progress versus Conservatism" A. R, Read. 




BENEDICTION. 




MUSIC BY COATES' ORCHESTRA. 





m 



iiif i is 



««W#< 



ttt 







J?se\o 



H,t£ 






37 


FRANKLIN 


LITERARY SOCIETY. 




FOUNDED 1831, 


Wvxrf KoLpdia <Pp7Jv. 




©filters. 


L F. SPREXGER.. 


President, 


W. H. BAYLESS . . . 


, . . . ..' Vice-President. 


CLEARFIELD PARK .*. , Secretary. 


0, 0. McCLURE.... 


, . . Con. Secretary . 


ALFRED HEBNER. 


Kec. S^cbetary. 


J. W. WALK 


: . . Critic. 


L. F. SPREXGER 


Treasurer, 


J. R, HENDERSON. 


, . Librarian. 




timbers. 




'13. 


William C. Alexander 


Henry Sraner, 


Emery S. Barrick, 


Isaac P. Schaeffer, 


Charles E. Barns, 


William H, Schuyler, 


John G. Diefenderfer, 


Albert P. Silver, 


George S. Huggins, 


Joseph R, Shimer, 
Lewis F, Sprengeiv, 


Wesley M. Hyde, 


Cyrus Knecht, 


Herman A. Stees. 


William R. Little, 


Henry M. Strabble, 


Ambrose K. Michler, 


Nathaniel Taylor, 


Thomas McXinch, 


Levi E. Waller, 


John A. Mouk, 


Joseph G. Williamson. 




>74. 


Henry A. Aller. 


Sylvanus R. Queen, 


William H Bayless, 


Emilius K. Sayre, 


Elijah R. Case, 


George R. Van Reed, 


Levi W. Case, 


Samuel R. Warrender, 


Francis G. Fisher, 


John W. P. Weston, i 


Israel P. Pardee. 


John R. Williams. 



38 



>T5, 



Samuel ,A. Besson, 
Henry B. Buckwalter, 
John W. Creveling, 
Thomas Craig, 
William W. Dale, 
Andrew F. Derr, 
Howard Fackenthall, 
John R. Henderson, 
Joseph E. Hoffman, 
Zacharias C. Hoch, 

James 

Joseph K. Alexander, 
Milton R. Alexander, 
George .A. Angle, 
Joseph H. Andrews, 
Clarence N . Andrews, 
Silas B. Brown, 
John A. Buchanan, 
Isaac Barber, 
George G. Barnes, 
Robert F. Caldwell, 
John A. Dtmlap, 
William F. Dannehower, 
John S. Freeman, 
Luther M. Fine, 
Jacob B. Graham, 



\V 



Nicholas H. Larzelere. 
Henry E. Otto, 
Hamilton H. Pollock, 
John E. Boss, 
Charles P. G. Scott, 
George E. Silver, 
William F. Silver, 
Samuel W. Shadle, 
John C Stuckert, 
Arthur E. Turner. 
Walk. 



>7G. 



Henry S. Griffis, 
James Gayley. 
Willis M. Hunt. 
Alfred Heebner, 
Alexander S. Kinkead. 
Henry R. Koch, 
Edwin H. Lamberton, 
Henry Long, 
Oliver H. Melcher, 
Oliver C. McClure, 
Samuel B. Neilson, 
Clearfield Park. 
John Phillips, 
Wyn R. Sewell, 
William C. St nil. 



PRANK HALL DEBATING CLUB. 



" Tin cabello haze sombra. 



J. A, BUCHANAN President. 

S. W. SHADLE Vice-President. 

W. M. HUNT Secretary. 

M. u. ALEXANDER Critic. 



39 
ANNUAL ENTERTAINMENT 

OF THE 

FRANKLIN LITERARY SOCIETY 

Tuesday Evening, May 27 } i8jj. 

ORDER OF EXERCISES. 

Music Piano. 

INVOCATION. 

Song (Chorus) Glee Club. 

Address or Welcome by the President. . . .L. E. Walleti. 

Oration Benjamin Franklin E. S. Barrick. 

Song — (Quartette). 
Logan, Michler, Long, Shimer. 

Poem "Zayda" J. R. Henderson. 

Song— (Duet.) 

DlEFENDERFER, WESTON. 

Essay « Cheek'" S. R. Warrender. 

Song,— (Quintette). 
Siitmer, Steers, Logan, Weston. Dtefenderfer. 

Oratton " Science and Religion" J. G. Williamson, Jr. 

Song (Chorus) Glee Club. 

(C. E.Burns. 

Paper " Smoky Moments"' Editors <J J. E. Ross. 

I H. H. Pollock. 
Song and Chorus. 

DlEFENDERFER, WESTON, LOGAN, ShTMER. 

Oration " The Undercurrent" N. Taylor. 

Song .(Chorus). Glee Club. 

BENEDICTION. 



GLEE CLUB. 
J. A. Buchanan, J. G. Diefenderfer, IT. V. 1 ogan. 
IT. Long, A.'K. Michler, J. R, Shimer, 

IT. A. Stees, R. A. Stewart, J. W. P. Weston. 

Piantst .1. S. Freeman. 



40 



REUNION. 



July i, 1873, 



FEAIKLIN. 

BE V. T. DE WITT TALMAGE, D.D Brooklyn. 

HORACE ROLAND, 70 Orator. 

WILLIAM H. SCHUYLER. '73 Valedictoiu as. 

-JAMES W. WALK, 75 Responded 



JOHN C. STUCKERT, '75, \ 
ANDREW F. DEER, 75, j 



Marshals. 



WASHINGTON. 

j as. a. Mcknight, 71 orator. 

ENOCH BENSON, 73 Valedictorian 

CHARLES BRANSBY, 75 Resposder. 



HENRY M'.DU BOIS/75, / 

J. M> 

EDMUND D. SMITH, 75, f 



AJltvUAI.rt. 






><$&Jk H 




*4#P<#> 



#f^ 



r 






43 



m™ 






r i 



fe«m* 



1 




GAMMA 




CHAPTER- ESTABLISHED 1853, 

• 








lJUsxbtnt ffl embers. 


1 




Uriali Sandt, Frank and Marsh, '55. 


1 

H 


D. 


Lachenour, '59, J. H. Breusinger, '70, 


C. 


F. 


Ckidsey, '64, 


F. F. Drinkkouse, Lehigh Un'y, '71 


J. 


W. 


Wood, '66, 


* W. H. Thompson, '73, 


H 

i 

i 
i 


W 


. Scott, 67, 


W. H. Hulick, '73, 
A. Snyder, '74. 

%dxbt timbers. 

'73. 

Geo. L, Huggins. 

'75, 


W 


. F 


Bainbridge, 


W. C. Shipman. 
'76. 


E. 


N Hug-gins, 


Chester F aimer, 


W 

\ 


A. 


Petri ken, 


R. F. Lind. 
* Deceased. 




-r^-:1P 



45 



iik**ty$ 



t* 



:»1 



RHO CHAPTER-ESTABLISHED 1855, 



$esft>mt IfUwbers. 



S. A. Freeman, A. M. '57, 
Prof. E. H. Barlow, A. M., Amherst, '63, 
Prof. J. W. Moore, A. M., M. D., '64, 
Rev. F. E. Miller, A. M., Miami, '64, 



Jos. Martin, A. M., '59. 
S. W. De Witt, A.M., '69, 
D. B. King, A.B., 71, 
Jeff. Snyder, A. B., 72. 



%xtibz HI embers , 



Fred. H. Adams, 
Ed. N, Barrett, 



G\ B. Anderson, 
J. W. B. Bausman. 
Wm. C. Bovard, 



'73, 



G\ M. Lewis. 



'74, 



J. F. Stonecipher. 



Clias. E. 'Burns, 
Ed. M. Killouffli 



W. M. Miller, 
E. K. Sayre, Jr 
S. L. Stiver, 



J. F, Henderson, 
W. S. Hetrick, 
R. S. Manley, 



>75. 



J. E. Ross, Jr., 
E. D. Smith, 
W. E. Thomas. 



W. B. Cooley, 
J. S. Freeman, 
J. K. Havs, 



♦76. 



H. F. Weeks. 



A. Heehner, 

W. C. McKnight, 

W. C. Stull, 



47 



■iw m 



TAU CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1857. 



lUsibmt ^embers. 



William W. Moon, '61, 
S. V. B. Kachline, '63, 
W. L. Kirkpatrick, '63, 
Francis Reeder, '63, 
Howard J. Reeder. '63, 
W. Hackett, Jr., '63, 
Clement Stewart, '64, 



Robt. J Hess, '66, 
A. B. Howell, '68, 
W. B. Owen, '71, 
John Meigs, '71, 
John Fox, '72, 
W. B Hazleton, 72, 
H. T. Buckley, '73, 



Robt. F. Weiss, '75. 



%dxbt *8&,iwtbtxB. 



W. C Andersen, 
E. J. Angle, 



'73. 



'74. 



M. L. Cook, 

N. G. Moore. 



F. G. Fisher, 
Clay Kemble, 



Henry M. Dubois, 
John C. Stuckert, 



Frank G. Corbin, 
Henry L. Griffis, 
T. A. H. Hay, 
John B. Hendry, 
W. M. Henburn, 



'75- 



'76. 



N. M. Orr, 

J. W. P. Weston. 



Jas. G. Gibbs, 
T. Dolan Sayre. 

M. H. Jones, Jr., 
Abram McMurtrie, Jr. 
John Porter, 
Frank B. Reed, 
Wyn Reeves SewelJ. 



49 



IP 1 



DELTA CHAPTER-ESTABLISHED 1863. 



Ilestbent SUmbers. 



David B. Holt, '67, M. Servetus Seip, M. E., '68, 

Isaac Ott, M. D., '67, Sylvester C. Smith, A. B., '72, 

Samuel Y. Heller, '68, Wm. S. Sweeney, A.B., '72. 

Prof. C.McIntyre, A.M..M.D., '68, Henry Richards, Lehigii Univ '75, 



idibe HI embers, 



'73. 

Albert H. Davidson, Daniel Mr Kennedy, 

Wm. R. Little. 



James B. Gilfillan, 
Jacob B. Heller, Jr., 
Clinton Hilliard, 



'74. 



Frederick E. Keim, 
Joseph A. Snively, 



Ethan A. Weaver, 
John J. Williams. 



Henry E. Otto, 



Carlos E. Armijo, 
Edward H. Anderson, 
John A. Covode, 
Ira Dumont, 
Luther M. Fine. 



'75. 



'76. 



George C. Tilden. 



A. Harper R. Guiley, 
William P. Mifflin, 
Henry E. Raesly, 
Herbert F. Seip, 
James R. Shick, 
Israel H. Supplee. 




j^sSsbM^Jz^ 



51 



am 



a. 



film 




PHI CHARGE — ESTABLISHED 1866. 



VV. N. Stem, '68, , J. M. Harris, 71, 

P. W. Stewart, '69. B. Douglass, Jr., 71 

D. Mixsell, College of N. J., 71, J. H. Lott, 73. 



Active pmlw. 



L. P. Appleman, 



A. L. Fullerton, 



N Scott, 



-73. 

F. P. Billmeyer. 
'71. 

LP. Pardee. 
'75. 
H. B. Backwalter. 
'76. 

A. M. Lonff. 



&3 



PHI CHAPTER-ESTABLISHED 1867. 

gUtfAent Pettfbtt* 

B. E. James. '69, J. D. Maxwell, 71. 



'gmm pumw 


Mj. 


'73. 




A. K. Michler, 


I. P. Shaffer. 


-74.. 




L. B. Doty, 


C. J. Nourse, 


S. M. Riley. 




'75. 




J. V. A. Craighead, 


C. H. Milligan 


S. W. Fleming-, 


D. W. Nevin, 


R. A. Stewart. 





J. W. Clendenin, H. S. Magraw, 

A. Creveling, G. E. Scott, 

J. T. Fuller. V. P. Wiermau. 



■nraaci 



)iilll/k 






A// \/ Syrj/s <\ /A >> 

t 




■miwsmiMkiw 






PHI CHAPTER-ESTABLISHED 1868. 



Qtfix&tnt Pcmter. 



Cassius Onstead. 



Active gjttmtw. 



>T5. 



Herbert H. Jackson, 
Josepli Brakeley, 
Thomas Craig, 



Richard A. Roberts, 
Zacliarias C. Iloch, 
Josepli W. Scroggs. 



'70. 



A. P. Berlin, 
Harry Emmons, 
G rover L. Lowe, 
Silas B. Brown, 



Harry V. Logan, 
Arthur C. Logan, 
Austin C. Norwood, 
John R. Pfouts. 



56 



1 



Sftt gftff ft ffl 



PENNA. THETA CHAPTER-ESTABLISHED 1869*. 



Ilcsiircnt 4$embers. 






Rev. H. W. McKniglit, G. D. StahJv, A. M., 

Penn. College '62. Penn. College, 70 

W. IT. Emory. A.M., Penn. College, '70. 



Sttttbe Members. 



W. C. Alexander 
E. S. Barrick, 
W. M. Hvde, 



.lohn A. Monk. 
Henry Rumer, 
L. F, Sp renge*„ 
Nathaniel Tavlor. 



W. II. Bay less, 

P, L.Clark, 
P, C. E^nns, 



S. ti. Queen, 
Sain. Sprecher, 
John R. William 



S. A. Besson, 
W. \V. Dale, 



A. F. Derr, 
Mont. Evans, 
V II. Larzelere. 



?7 0. 

J. K. Alexander, Joho K. Keller, 

W. F. Dannehower, E. II. Lamberton, 

l-M ward Peacock. 




:.:u:> 



* ■<•; 



te j ,; - - - rn 7|CL J ■ 



57 



SUMMARY OF SECRET SOCIETIES 



Washington Hall. 

Seniors 16 

Juniors 21 

Sophomores 19 

Freshmen 32 

88 
Franklin Hall. 

Seniors 22 

Juniors 12 

Sophomores 21 

Freshmen 30 

85 
Phi Kappa Sigma. 

Seniors l 

Juniors 

Sophomores 2 

Freshmen 4 

7 
7Jil/a Kappa Epnlon. 

Seniors 5 

Juniors 7 

Sophomores (> 

Freshmen 7 

25 
Zeta Psi. 

Seniors 4 

J uniors 4 

Sophomores 3 

Freshmen 10 

21 



Iota Alpha Kappa. 

Seniors ?> 

Juniors 7 

Sophomores 2 

Freshmen 11 

2^ 
Thda Bella Chi 

Seniors 2 

Juniors 2 

Sophomores 1 

Freshmen 2 

7 
Sigma Chi. 

Seniors 2 

Juniors 3 

Sophomores 5 

Freshmen 6 

1 6 
Upsilon Bel a. 

Seniors 

J uniors 

Sophomores (> 

Freshmen 8 

14 
Phi Kappa Psi. 

Seniors 7 

Juniors G 

Sophomores 5 

Freshmen 5 

28 



.08 



ITafejette |leaMitj-|l00i!u 



QUAHTEHLIES, MONTHLIES AND SEMI-MONTHLIES. 



African Repository, 

Aldine, 

American Bee Journal, 

" Journal of Science and Arts, 

" Nationalist, 
Art Journal, 
Atlantic Monthly, 
British Quarterly, 
Blackwood's Magazine, 
Bibliotheca Sacra, 
Cotemporary Review, 
Edinburgh Review, 
Eclectic Engineering Magazine, 
Foreign Missionary, 
Galaxy, 

Gardener's Monthly, 
Harper's Monthly, 
Home Missionary, 
Annales des Mines, 



Journal of the Chemical Society, 
" Franklin Institute. 
Lippincott's Magazine, 
London Quarterly, 
Methodist Quarterly, 
Missionary Herald, 
National Quarterly, 
North American Review, 
New Englander, 
Our Monthly, 
Overland Monthly, 
Presb. Quart 'ly & Princeton Review, 
Popular Science Monthly, 
Peter's Musical Monthly, 
Revue des Deux Mondes, 
Scribner's Monthly, 
The Academy, 
Westminster Review, 
American Messenger. 



WEEKLIES. 



Atha? ileum, 
Appleton's Journal, 
College Courant, 
Chemical News, 
Christian Intelligencer, 

" Statesman, 
Courrier des Etats-Unis, 
Every Saturday, 

Engineering and Mining Journal, 
Episcopal Register, 
Ha rper's Weekly, 
The Mining Journal, 
The Iron Age, 
The Rocky Mountain Presbyterian, 



Independent, 

Illustrated Christian Weekly, 

Methodist, 

Nation, 

New York Staats Zeitung, 

Presbyterian. 

" Banner, 

Reformed Church Messenger, 

< Tic American, 
Weekly State Gaz€ I 
Official Gazette. 
Christian Weekly, 
New York Observer, 
Lycomins Standard. 



59 



Easton Express. 

" Free Pre^s, 
New York Herald, 

Evening Mail, 
" Times, 



Yale Literary Magazine, 

Amherst Student, 

Nassau Magazine, 

Argus, 

Dartmouth, 

Brunonian, 

Antiochian, 

Collegian, 

Notre Dame Scholastic, 

Index Niagarensis, 

Mt. Pleasant Reveille, 

Medical Independent, 

Public School Advocate, 

Dalhousie Gazette, 

Herald, 

Torch Light, 

Camp Fire, 

Vidette, 

Cap and Gown, 

Times, 



DAILIES. 

New York Tribune, 
Witness, 
World, 

Philadelphia Press, 

" Public Ledger 

Miner's Journal. 

COLLEGE. 

Cornell Era, 
Lafayette Monthly, 
Harvard Advocate, 
William's Quarterly, 
Hamilton Monthly, 
Annalist, 
Miami Student, 
Irving Union, 
College Days, 
Georgia Collegian, 
Courier, 

University Press, 
Simpsonian, 
Acorn, 
Qui Vive, 

McKendree Repository, 
World, 

University Reporter, 
Yale Courant, 
Review, 
The College Courant. 



The Reading-Room is open every week day from 9 to 12 A.M., from 
1 to 4 P. M., and from 6 to 9 P. M. Also, on Wednesday and Saturday 
from 1 to 5 P. M. 

Dictionaries, Cyclopaedias and other works of reference belonging to the 
Library are placed in this room. 

D. B. KING, Curator of the Reading- Room . 



COLLEGE LIBEAHY. 

Seniors and Freshmen, Thursday 9 A. M. 
Juniors and Sophomores, Saturday, 9 A. M. 

Prof. F. A. MARCH, Librarian.. 



60 



LAFAYETTE 





i . J. NOUIISE President. 

S. W. FLEMING Vice-President. 

J. W. B. BAUSM AN Secretary. 

E. K. SAYRE, Jk Treasurer. 

L. M. Fink Gen. Manager. 

^ gjfet»fcer*. 

J. \V. Bailsman, C. J, Nourse, 

J. V. A. Craighead, E. K. Sayre, 

L. M. Fine, W. It. SewelJ, 

Sam Sprecher, S. W. Fleming. 

T. D. Sayre, F. G. Fisher, 

IL M. Du Bois, II. A.Stees, 

1. P. Pardee, A. I, Fullerton, 

J. A.Covode, J. F. Keller. 



61 






V '1,1 * 



•■'. :,;',„..,,; 






Everlasting Blow Pipe — Found in Saxony. 

'73. 

Q. L. Huggi ns. . .^ Heavy'Spar. 

Massive variety, associated with many ores. 

'71. 

Win. McK. Miller -. Meers(c)lia(u)m. 

Soft, dull wliite ; greasy feel ; peculiar odor when rubbed. 
1. F. Pardee. Ichthyophthalin — 

IteapohyllJte ■ oolor white ; sometimes a shade of green. Found 

if) traps. 

'75. 

2< . V. Craighead G reasy Quartz. 

Milky. Very common. 

'76. 

E. Peacock Emerald. Very 

green, transparent mineral. Before blowpipe becomes clouded. 

If. L. Griffis, "1 children(ite). Surface dull green ; whiten before 

A. H. R. Guile v, y ,. 

i blowpipe. 

A. C. Norwood, I 



62 




PUBLISHED HY THE SENIOR CLASS. 



cfbitors 1873. 



W. C. Alexander, 
W. C. Anderson, 
S. G. Barnes, 
E. N. Barrett, 
E. S. Barrick, 
C. E. Burns, 



J. G. Diefenderfer 
T. C. English, 
G. M. Lewis, 
A. R. Reed, 
W. ir. Schuyler,. 
N. Taylor. 



W. H. Bayless, 

L. W. Case, 
R. L. Clark, 
E. T. Davis, 
P. C. Evans, 
\\ G. Fisher. 



tfbiiors 1874. 

J. B. Heller, Jr., 

S. L. Stiver, 
J. P. Stonecipher, 
G. R. Van Reed, 
S. R, Warrender, 
J. R, Williams. 



63 



ffi'MMwd (tougelual <f oetettr 



ORGANIZED 1833. 



Go work to-day in my Vineyard: 



The objects of this Society are to advance the standard of Cbrfs 
tianity, and awaken an interest in the Missionary Work. 

The Society maintains a Library of five hundred volumes. Many 
of the prominent Clergy and Laymen of our Land were formerly 
connected with this organization. Its Anniversary is held on Sunday 
eve preceding Commencement. 

Regular daily Prayer- Meetings are held at 6 P. M., under the 
auspices of this Society. About sixty of its members are engaged a* 
Superintendents and Teachers of Sunday Schools in and around 
Eastou. Eight of-these schools and several weekly Cottage Prayer- 
Meetings are conducted almost wholly by them. 

The schools are as follows : 

Cedarville Henry Long Superintendent.. 

Delaware Union J. R. Henderson 

Chestnut Hill W. E. Thomas 

College Hill J. F. Stonecipher 

Jackson W. H. Schuyler 

Delaware A. L. Kinkead 

Lime Kiln O. H. Melcher 

Bushkill • W. C. Sterling 

S. G. BARNES President. 

G. E. SILVER Vice-Presidem 

J. R. HENDERSON Rec. Secretary, 

C. L. STEVENS Cor. Secretary, 

W. E. THOMAS Treasurer. 

S. a. BARNES Librarian. 

S. L. STIVER 1 

A. J. SULLIVAN y-ExE( tjtive Com. 

a G. BARNES j 



64 



nfaw 



m mMmmm 



a 



Wednesday, July 2d, 1878. 
HOIOEAET OEATIOXs. 

EQUAL IN RANK. 

STEPHEN G. BARNES Philological Oration. 

EMERY S. BARRICK Latin Salutatory. 

NATHANIEL TAYLOR Valedictory. 

JOSEPH G. WILLIAMSON Classical Oration. 

0v*ttro*. 

William C. Alexander, Ambrose K. Micliler, 

William C. Anderson, Henry Rumer, 

Edward N. Barrett, Wm. H. Schuyler, 

Chas. E. Barns, • Joseph R. Shinier, 

John Geo. DiefenderiVr, Albert P. Silver, 

Theodore C. English, Lewis F. Sprenger, 

Thos. C. Galbreath, Geo. M. Lewis, 
Henrv Struble. 



Monday, June SO, 1873. 

L. P. APPELMAN Master of Ceremonies. 

J. ( i . WILLIAMSON Oration. 

E. S. BARRICK '..... Poem. 

E. N. BARRETT Essay. 

A. R. READ Free Oration. 

V. P. BILMEYER Historian. 

H. A. STEES Presentation Address. 

N. TAYLOR Valedi.torv. 



65 



fHitjsfcal ©rpnbatioris 



8I0MA Cttl QUMmxrE, 




£&&&*&£ &/J0--- ": 



rt-jno 




A. K. MICHLER. 
V. P. WIERMAN 
R. H. STEWART.. 
R. E. JAMES 




^■QSrskP^:- ■ ■' .&**^^ul 



STATS I OUE CtUB, 



N. M.Orr 



IT. M. DuBois. 



1st Tenor, 



T. A Hay ) 

W. C. Anderson ) 

J. W. Weston ) 

Wyn Reeves Sew km. 



2d Tenor. 



W. M. Hepburn,. \ 

Clay Kemble ) 

M. II. Jones, Jr... \ 
, Pianist. 



st Bass. 



- 2d Bas*. 



CG 



t-he mAytojij} mtz club. 



,'f?^<|*W% 




D. K. E. 



" Wilt thou have Music ? Hark ! Apollo pi 
And twenty caged nightingales do sing!' 



zvs 



J. R. Henderson, '75. 
R. S. Mauley, 75 .... 



J. F. Stonecipher, 74. ) 

Soprano. '- 1st Basso. 

A. Heebner, 7(5 \ 



E. M. Killongh, 73 . ) J. w. B. Bailsman, 74 ) 

- Tenor. ' o 



Gr. B. Anderson, 74. . 
J. S. Freeman, 76. . . . 



W. E. Thomas, 7.">. . . ) 



2d Basso, 



J. E. Ross, 75. . . . ") 
W. B. COo'ley, 76. ) 



.Jfiamst. 



J. A. Buchanan 1st Tenor. A. Heebner is; Bass 

J. S. Freeman " " J.B.Graham " » 

J.A.Covode 2dTenor. Hen ry Long 3d B - 

tf. V.Logan " " Win. Cooley •• •• 

L - M - l ' in «' Basso Profimdo. 



iOSSOM «1?T£TT£ Or 1874. 



My^ 







i: In carmina bacchamur! 1 

Sam. Sprecher 1st Tenor. 

A. L. Fullerton 2d Tenor. 

J. W. Weston 1st Bass. 

J. W. Bailsman 2d Bass. 



John G. Diefenderfer, '78 Leader. 

f S. G. Barnes, 73, 



E. M. Killough, 



Soprano. - 



Alto. 



A. K. Michler, '73 
l\V C. Sterling, 73. 

(J. W. P. Weston, 74, 
(J. W. Scroggs, 75. 



Tenor - 



i S. Spreecher, 74, 
J. S. Freeman, 76. 



Bass . 



f J. M. St. Clair, 78, 
! J. R. Shinier, 73, 

II. A. Stees, 73, 

J. W. B. Bailsman, 74. 



68 



lta cam c& 




I. A. K. 



A. IT. Davidson . . | 

I 
1). M. Kennedy. . ! Soprano. 

I 
.1. R. Schick J 



J. J. Williams.... | 

I 
\V. P. Mifflin.... [Tenor. 

I 
.1 . A. Covode I 



H. E. Raesly....~) J. B. Heller. .. "1 

L. M. Fine !-Bass«>. J. A. Snively. . [~ Basso Profundo. 

I ' I 

V. E. Keim A. II. Guiley.. ! 



C. Hilliard 



Chorister. 



09 



(Saimq (Stabs. 



If A PI Oil 



B, 




"#£ is -:/// of <Pi-ety." 

M. L. Cook President. 

C. L. Stevens, J. W. Walk, 

Charles Bransby, .lames Bacon, 

J. F. Stoneciplier, J. R. Henderson, 

Enocli Benson, S. Gr. Barnes, 

W. C. Stull, C. E. Bums. 

W. E. Thomas Vice-President. 



70 



DUO Cli«»9 



FOUNDED A.D. 1867. 




" We heorian mannes gestrangiat/ 



S. L. STIVER President. 

S. P. SCHAEFFER Vice -President. 

G. M. LEWIS Secretary. 

fi. L. STIVER Treasurer. 

WILLIAM WHITE (Colored) Quadrumanous Waiter. 



i st Table. 



f J. B. Taylor Joker. 

H. R. Koch Kitchen Caller. 

J. E. Ross Musical Directors. 

| N. M. Orr Expounder of Jokes. 

J. Phillips Assistant Joker. 

[F. G. Fisher Silent Worker. 



fG. G. Barnes 1st Tenor. 



W. II. Bar less 



2 I fable. 



Joke Expounder. 



I J. 11. Supplee II -st. 

I J. II. Hicks Charged !■ 



71 



3d Table. 



f G. B. Anderson Pastry Judge. 

I 
G. M Lewis Laugliist. 

Ernest Jackson Irrepressible. 

| W. C. Anderson Moderator. 

A. K. Reed Pie-ous V. 

1 T. Craig « Pass the Sugar, 



-4th Table. 



(J. P. Scliaefer Kitchen Caller. 

I H. M. Du Boise Eala ! ! Warter ! ! ! 

j J. C. Stucker " Duby" Be Quiet ! 

A. E. Turner , . .Ravenous Gabbler. 

J. W. Clendenin Joker. 

[ E. J. Angle " Pass tbem Pertaters. 



5th Table. 



f E. H. Lamberton " Give me something to eat, 

I 

| J. Gayly King. 

I C. E Armijo Dry Joker. 

j 

| W. P. Mifflin Queen. 

I W. H. Dannehower " More Cakes." 

[_ W. A. Petriken " Let's have a Rest." 



6th Table. -{ 



[C. W. Bixby Joker. 

M. Bixby Toast ! Toast ! 

E. D. Smith " Cork up." 

j E. M. Kellough Heathen Chinee. 

A. P. Berlin Dispenser of Adam's Ale. 

! S. L. Stiver Bell Ringer. 



^©4E¥l»i" #&@It¥^ 






'0, 



3p^ 



"(Ring the bell, please." 



Engine* r of the Water Work 



Kaiser Thomas Mc Ninch 

Right Bauer N. Taylor. 

Left Bauer L. F. Sprenger. 

Joke Expounder J. Hoffman. 

) Little, 1st Engineer. 

) Kennedy, Ass. Engineer. 

HSotttwtitwit. 

| Shanks, 

I Taylor. 

j Hoffman, 

I 

I Williams 

I Lee, 

! 

I Shadle, 



On Religious and Political Discussions 



Snivel v, 



On the Careful Presentation of Eatables < 

I Lewis. 

Pi(e)us C'ary, Sprenger, Kennedy and Robinson. 

Too great for any Committee Tattle. 



IAI11IPP1 





"Tkain follows thunder J' 
©ffitcrs. 

J. W. B. BAUSMAN President. 

W. R. SEWELL Vice-Presideni 

C. H. MILLIG AN ; . . . Secretary. 

J. W. B. BAUSMAN Treasurer. 

T. D. SAYER.. Chaplain. 

H. V. LOGAN Poet. 

E. H. ANDERSON Orator. 

W. M. HUNT Carter. 

H. E. OTTO Keeper ok Wine Boom. 

W. H. McCURDY Bell Ringer. 

(Kotossal Jt&.ers. 

R. A. Roberts, F. B. Reed. 

W. L. Plack, O. R. Scott. 

A. McMurtrie, J. B. Hendry. 
G.R. Van Reed. 

Clay Kemble Punctuality. 

A. C. Logan Born tired. 

1 



74 



LAE 1 ATI!! I CLUB 




" Life is reaV 



Notice. — Among the many inducements offered by this 
club, the following are especially worthy of notice: 

Six toothpicks are furnished each member daily. Fresh- 
men are compelled to eat sparingly, and all are requested 
to do so. 

Rich food is considered injurious to the inner man, and 
hot cakes are positively forbidden. 

No member of this club is allowed to board a friend 
" free of charge ; " any member offending in this particular, 
besides receiving the frown of the club, is charged 25c. 
per meal for such friend. 

('KfiCCVjS. 

President C. E. Burns. 

Vice-President Et. L. Clarke. 

Joker and Chaplain H.M. Struble. 

Recorder Jocorum S. R. Queen, 

Commissary and Treasurer J. G. Diefenderfer. 

Bell Ringer \«» I W. C. Sterling. 

Bell Ringer No 2 .J. K. Alexander. 



75 



PTE OHiXTJB -Ooiitiimeci. 

LIVE TO EAT. 

J- W. St. Clair,t H. M. Struble, 

W. H. SchuylenJ W, W. Dale, 

J. R. Shimer,§ S. R. Queen, 

M. EvftttS,J| R. L. Clarke, 

W. C. Sterling, H. A. Aller, 

J. G. Diefenderfer, H. Rumer, 

W. C. McNight, J. K. Alexander. 

EAT TO LIVE. 

C. E Burns, S. A. Beson, 

W. A. Stees, N". H. Larzalere, 

W. C. Bovard, L. W. Case, 

A. R Silver. 

* All members of tliis club are active ; 110 honorary msmbers are 
admitted. 

f Mors in panificias buckwheatas. 

X Too pi(e)ous. 

| Slow but sure. 

|| Big eater for such a little fellow. 






IJH. 




Officers. 

THOS. C. GALBREATH.- Pjiesident. 

A. J. SULLIVAN , . .Vice-President. 

S. M. WARRENDER Treasurer and Commissaky, 

3>ctibc IITembcrs. 

H. Emmons, E. R. ("'use. 

J. S. Freeman, Q. E. Silver, 

H. H. Pollock, W. F. Silver, 

A.J. Sullivan, Z. C. Hock, 

S. B. Brown, O. C. McClure, 

11. H.Jackson, A. A. Richards, 

J. M. McCahan, '.i. E. Raesly, 

A. R. Stewart, M. R. Alexander 



ZKZ„ 



IK 



k. 




"-•^-;>^& 



■^- ^^^? 






fPSR 



Officers : 

J. W. CREVELING President. 

E. B. WALKER Vice-President. 

W. M. K. MILLER Commissary. 

SUHfcre Members. 



Chief Grinders. 
A. Heebner, 
J. K. Hays, 
L. B. Walker. 

Carnivora. 
H. C. Bubb, 
Gr. E. Scott, 
J. E. Mann, 
W. McK. Miller 



Jersey Frog Hunters. 
(i. A. Angle, 
R. F. Caldwell, 
J. W. Creveling, 
J. Barber. 

Hash(ish) Eaters. 
W. F. Wicks, 
G. B. White, 



* Vacant — Applications received by tlie President. The person must be 
modest and unassuming-. 





fA AlM0 A , o 



eius 



SAM. SPECHER President. 

W. C. ALEXANDER Vice-President. 

J. A. MOUK Silent Worker. 

E. K. 8AYER Ditto (with jokes). 

S. M. RILEY Mammoth Masticator. 

C. J. NOURSE Fowl Dissector. 

A. T. DERR Ditto (raised To 2d power) 

L. V. A. CRAIGHEAD L'Exeaxt de 'in. 

II. FACKENTHALL Lower Carver. 

L. W. FLEMING Tax Gatherer. 

J. A. COVODE Butterply(er). 

J. C. WRIGHT 2d Hand Joke Max. 

L. M. FINE Orator. 

II. S. MAGRAW PhatMas 

T. .1. KELLER 3d St. Sport. 

ED. PEACOCK. .BlLLIARDISl 






x_> 



79 



B€t0BAVI€ GEM 



m 



■mm,® 



Ahead of Xa 1 1 th ippe for once. 




E. M. Barrett President and Early Riser. 

II. Kemper Vice-President and Pepper Box. 

E. J. Angle Chaplain and Patent Lightning Feeder 

A. H. Davidson . . .Yaw, Ich Byn (Treasurer). 

K. C. Blake Butcher Boy. 

J. W. P. Weston. . .Chicken Dissecter. 

A. G. Dewalt .Wind Pill Doctor. 

H. L. Griffis Always Busy. 

A. M. McComb Sling us a Piece. 

J. G. Gibbs General Hash Disguster. 

J. Hamilton .... <PiAo? de Sauer Kraut. 



SO 



s_a.:lts:f-^:r,:e2 



j- 




$tatto.tf, 
a . Jamais Arriere" 

a 11 nest sauce que cVappetiir 

||l embers. 

A. Kirtland Michler, Victor P. Wierman, 

John T. Fuller. 



SPlGtmfiftN TASTING ASSOCIATION 

G. L. HUGGINS President. 

F. H. ADAMS Chaplain. 

A. M. LONG Carver. 

W. F. BAINBRIDGE Soup Swiller. 

B. B. WYNKOOP Fish Monger. 

R. F. LTND Live* Inspector. 

E. N. HUGGINS ; Pie Tearer. 

AUGUSTUS CREVELING Pot atoe Smasher. 

NICHOLAS SCOTT Tikkev Stuffer. 

Resident Graduate and Chief Eater, 
W. S. AYRES. 



81 



O. ±C. CLUB 




General Magister Ceremonium : .T. W. Leard. 

Adjutor Ceremonium *S. B. Neilson, 

Librarius f J. B. Fuller. 

Medicus Convivie A. Leard. 

Emptor Grubbum *B. M. Reed, 

Homo Jocorum J. A. Dunlap. 

Chaplain JJ. B. Graham. 

Bell Ringer J. R, Kepple. 

{Henry Long, J.J. A. Buchanan, 

*J. C. Irwin, f A. L. Kinkead, 

J. W. SSoroggs. 

J. E. Ross, H. F. Weeks. 

* In love with the cook, 
f Charged double board. 
+ Dignified Members. 



82 



BALL OLVB 



■*• 



LAFAYETTE CLUB, 



J. B. HELLER, '74 President. 

J. W. B. BAUSMAlS 1 , '74 Vice-President, 

C. J. NOURSE, '74 Secretary. 

A. M. McCOMB, '75 Treasurer. 



T. C. Galbreath, e, A. M. McComb, 3d 

C. J. Nourse, p. F. P. Billmeyer, s. 

J. W. B. Bailsman, 1st b. C. H. Armijo, 1. f. 

J. B. Heller, 2d b. W. IT. Bayless, c. f. 

6. B. Anderson, r. f. 



During the past year the Nine have played nine match 
games, of which they have won six and lost three. 

The games won were Lehigh University, three ; Crows, 
two; Wilber, one. (James lost were, Eastons, three. The 

Nine in these games scored a list oi' 212 rnns .'coiinst ] 14, 



LAFAYETTE BASE. BALL CLUB- Continued. 

'75 x\fNE. 

A. M. McComb Captain. 

W. F. Bainbridge '. c . 

C.II. Milligan p. 

W. II. Harrison 1st b. 

J. V. A. Craighead .2d b. 

A. M. McComb. . 3d b. 

R, A. Roberts s. s. 

A. F. Derr 1. f. 

J. II. Hicks c. f. 

T. D. Sayre .r. f. 



'7 6 M\E. 

E. H. Anderson Captain. 

F. G. Corbin p. 

C. H. Armijo s. s. 

C. Fulmer 1st b. 

J. II. Supplee 2d b. 

J. A. Covode 3d b. 

A. L. Kinkead k £ 

H. R. Kraber c. f. 

E. H. Lamberton r. f. 



84 



got* gtyU § jippn g. & iluV 



President W. R. LITTLE. 

Secretary E. A. WEAVER. 

NINE. 

E. II. Anderson c. 

J. H. Supplee p. 

C. II. Armijo . . . . , s. s. 

A. IT. Davidson 1 st b. 

J. B. Heller, Jr 2d b. 

W. P. Mifflin , 3d b. 

J. A. Covode 1. f . 

D. M. Kennedy . c. f. 

J. R. Shick r. f. 

Field Captain J. B. HELLER. 

Scorer F. E. KEIM. 

CI, ASS OF '74. 

J. W. B. BAUSMAN President. 

E. K. SAYRE, Jr Vice-President. 

W. II. BAYLESS Secretary. 

J. B. HELLER Treasurer. 

E. K. SAYRE, Jr Scorer. 

FIRST NINE. 

C. J. Nourse Captain. 

W. IF. Bayless c. 

C. J. Nourse p. 

J. W. B. Bailsman .1st b. 

J. B. Heller 2d b. 

G. B. Anderson 3d b, 

L. B. Doty b. s. 

E. K. Sayre 1. t. 

N M. On- c. t 

W. M. Miller r. f. 

Class NTineof'74 hold Championship of CoMege. 






■ & 



§jMn Mappa j§p8ibn §ont §lub. 

Composed of the Active Members of the Rlio Chapter of the 
D. K. E. Fraternity. 

OKGA^I/,ED IX 1STO. 

Boat "Delta," oared lapstreak, outrigger, 40 feet long-. 34 inches 
wide, weight 300 lbs. ; carries a coxswain. 

Uniform— Blue and Gold. 

®ttwtx$. 

E. M. Killough Captain. 

E. D. Smith Lieutenant. 

J. F. Stonecipher Parser. 

J. W. B. Bailsman 1 
I 
J. E. Henderson . . !- Executive Committee. 

J. S. Freeman .... J 

Seta Psi Boat Club* 

ORGANIZED IN 1871. 

Composed of the Members of the Tau Chapter Zeta Psi Fraternity. 

BOATS, 

1 Four-oared lapstreak barge :i Naiad," 40 ft. long.. 3 ft. wide. 
1 Two pair-oared lapstreak outrigger " Gazelle." 28 ft. long, 2.8 wide. 
Uniform — White trimmed with blue. 

E. J. Angle Captain. 

J. W. Weston 1st Lieutenant. 

N. M. Orr 2d Lieutenant. 

W. C. Anderson Parser. 

J. W. Weston, ') 

Clay Kemble, \- Executive Committee. 

H. M. DuBois. J 



S6 

ill THE T A . 

"(Pro sahde corporis/ \ 

L. F. Springer. . . , Boss. 

W. W. Dale Head-shaver. 

X. H. Larzelere Ba(w)llwhacker 

S. A. Besson .Pendulum. 

'79 EXPERTS. 

u f Recte (Blundewmus" 
(©fitters. 

R. L. Clark , President. 

H. A. Aller Secretary. 

L. W. Case Treasurer. 

Members, 

II. A. Aller, E. R. Case, 

L. W. Case, R. L Clark, 

S. R. Warren der. 

Vesper Cpoquel Club. 

" Animi Relexandi Causa. Dum vivimus, vivamus" 

(Officers. 

J. B. Taylor President, 

C. W. BlXBY Secretary. 

Jas. Bacon Treasurer. 

^embers. 

Jas. Bacon, O. C. McClure, 

M. Bixby, C. Park. 

C. YV. Bixby, C. L. Stevens, 

.!. B. Taylor. 



87 



GRANT AND WILSON INMCIBLES, 

Attached to the Easton Regiment, 

(BHfieers. 

E. J. Angle Major. 

S. W. Fleming Capt. Company K. 

X. M. On*. Capt. Company L. 

E. M. Killough Capt. Company M. 

Samuel Sprecher 1st Lieut. Company K 

L. E. Waller 1st Lieut. Company L. 

H. B. Buckwalter 1st Lieut. Company M. 

J. A. Covode 2d Lieut. Company K. 

W. F. Bainbridge. .2d Lieut. Company L, 

W. C. MeKnight .2d Lieut. Company M. 

(& x esrutiv e $ om mitt f e. 

E. S. Barrick, G. R. Van Reed, 

S. W. Fleming. 

Two Hundred Members in the Company. 



i k k, omnn ctua 

J. A. Snively King. W. 11. Little 1st Knight. 

J. R. Schick Queen. J. B. Heller 2d Knight. 

A. H. Davidson . . 1st Castle. E. A. Weaver. . . 1st Bishpo. 

F. E. Keim 2d Castle. D. M. Kennedy . . 2d Bishop. 

C. H. Armijo, H. F. Leip, 

E. H. Anderson, J. II. Supplee. 



88 



I- o. s. s 



W. C. Sterling Fixed Star. 

J. A Monk Planet, 

1). M. Kennedy Meteor. 



.locjdi) foij the :tmwntion of fl/iiclto to jhooliH. 



Archon . J. A Sniyely. 

Super Archon T. A. Monk. 

Librarius . W. IT. BayJess. 

Thesaurus 1). M. Kennedy, 



W. R. Little, 



J. A. Snively, 



Sleeper. . . . 



CHAIRMEN. 
'73. 

J. A. Monk, 
W. C. Sterling. 

'74. 

F. E. Keim. 
,T. B. Heller. 



I). M. Kennedy, 



P. C. Evans, 



VV. II. Ba,ylcss 



No candidates are admitted to this Society except from the 
upper classmen, as these only arc supposed to have/fhe discretion 
necessary *o the performance of the ardu< us duties of the Order. 

A Prizi has been established of one pack of tobacco (Lone 
Jack) to be given to the man who can smoke a pipe of the 
Super-Archon's tobacco in the Thesaurus' pipe. 



Sit 



LAFAYETTE BAR. 



" Tempora mutantur } ei nos mutamur in Mis. 



Adams High Church Lawyer. 

Anderson Malpractioner. 

Angle . Constitutional Lawyer. 

Barrett " York State" Lawyer. 

Barrick Law of Nations. 

Billmeyer Low Criminal Lawyer. 

English Jersey Crim. Lawyer. 

Kemper Buckeye Lawyer. 

Lewis Case Lawyer. 

Monk Real Estate Lawyer. 

Shanks Revealed Lawyer. 

Sprenger Natural Law. 

Struble Unnatural Law. 

Taylor High Toned Lawyer. 

Waller Divorce Lawyer. 

Williamson High Criminal Lawyer. 



* The Forlorn Hope of '73. 



90 



P EIZES. 



The Fowler Prize. — An annual prize of thirty dollars was founded in 

1862, by Rev. William ('. Fowler, LL. D., under the following provisions: 

" A Committee of at least three shall be chosen by the Faculty, to deter- 
mine which student of the Senior Class has made the greatest proficiency in 
English Philology. 

"The decision of the Committee is to be made after attending an examination 
in some English classic, conducted by the Professor of English, and after read- 
ing essays written by the several members of the class, which shall contain a 
discussion of the language of some English classic." 

The Class of 1871 were examined on Jluni*. — the prize was awarded to 
William Baxter Owen. 

The Class of 1872 were examined on Pope. — The prize was awarded to 
James 1. Good. The Class of 187o were examined on Goldsmith. The prize 
was awarded to Joseph G. Williamson, Jr. 

The Harvey Pbize, — An English prize of twenty dollars, for the Junior 
Class, has been founded by O. J. Harvey, A.B., of the class of 1871. 

In the Class of 187)1 it was awarded to S. G. Barnes. 

The Early English Text Society's Prize, offered annually by the 
London Society of that name for the best examination in English before 
Chaucer, was won by S. Q. Barnes, of 1873, for the best examination in 
Beowulf. 

ASTRONOMICAL Prize. — An annual prize of thirty dollars awarded to the 
student in the Senior Class who has made the highest attainment in Astrono- 
mical Science. In 1871 it was awarded to James C. Crawford, in 1872 to 

J EKE ERSON SN YDEK. 

Mathematical Prize. — An annual prize of twenty dollars, awarded to 
a member of the .Junior Class for proficiency in Mathematical studies. It was 
awarded in 1871 to James 1. GOOD, in 1S72 to NATHANIEL Taylor. 



Douglass Prizes. — Founded in 187J. One of one hundred dollars, four 
of fifty dollars and four of twenty five dollars, fur proficiency in the Patristic 
( lourse 



91 






^ c# 



WASHINGTON SOCIETY ENTERTAINMENT 



K. S. Blake, 
JL M. DuBois, 

J. G. G.ibbs, 



E. I). Smith, 
A. ,1. Sullivan, 
\Y. K. Thomas. 



FRANKLIN SOCIETY ENTERTAINMENT 



II. B. Buekwaker, 
Thos. Craig, 
A. F.'Derr. 



W. W. Dale. 
X. II. Larzelere, 
A. E. Turner, 



i»*t i»u m**> 

(Lifers. 

W. K. Little President. 

F. P. BiLOfEYER ... Secretary. 

J. W. Ckeveltng Treasurer. 

Captains. 

T. P. Pardee, N. M. Orr. 



s= 



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cc:^.^::i-:j;:jCHHc:Cri:)x:iMc^xc(-'»'s«"i-xx:M-«rrHXBX'"N 

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:*«so -^ : 

■ -«8£ _-£ 

~i 1 — M 






25 .- • 



'•- £ -=J|fegll|:-|"- 1 £-Tie«^ 




>,j^a2qa-oMCQ5p!^<l-<2 0h>, a^^a^^iobw^s/^o^^/.-^-J 



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>— . . > Ci3 ^ —3 -w _«»>>• ■— _ 1^1 — rv< ■— — ' -- r," >>■ _ Cj _ >— >r — k > -> — r -'<'.;-: Ll? <• /. ^-> , -vj 



: w J x H u: jj r ~ u S < — '■ '— e- - ? V. Q — :_' 5 1 



^ <-=<-- '^ ^ -?' <i J 






I £ SB fc , 



93 



STATISTICS OF THE CLASS OF - 73. 



Number at graduation, 42. 

Number on entering, 58. 

Entered subsequently and by transfer, 31. 

Whole number connected with class, 89. 

Left College, 44- for reasons best known to ; ' the powers that be." 

Died. ::. 

Number of Petitions to the Faculty, 160 : number granted, 1 per week. 

X umber conscientiously opposed to signing Petitions, zero. 

Age at* graduation— -Oldest, 31 years, 1 month, 1 day, 2 hours, 7 seconds ; 
youngest, 20 years, 1 month, 20 days, 1 hour, 3 minutes, lb% seconds. 

Total age, centuries, 62 years, 7 months, 27 days. 5 hours, 40 minutes, 49 
seconds. 

Height— Longest, 5 feet, ll;< inches ; shortest, 5 feet 4 inches. 

Total height, 14 poles, 2 yards, 4 feet, l-' 8 inches. 

Average length, 5 feet, 3-7 inches. 

Weight— Heaviest, 202 : lightest, 115. 

Total weight, 2 tons, 14 cwt.. 2 qr., 16 lbs., 8 ozs. 

Average weight, 134 , lbs. 

Bandy-legged, 1. 

X umber married, 2 : extremely doubtful, 1. 

First child. November 16th, 1872. 

Xk'k N&mes. — Fred, Alex, Billy, Dick, Richard III., Eleazer Jacob, Pax, Appy, 
Deacon, .Parson, Activity, Fatty, Papa, Damphino, Benny, Devil, Satan, Bill, 
Devilmeyer, Windy, Samson, Cookey, Davy, Dietfie, Louis XIV., My Friend, 
Daddy, Gal, Liberty Corner, Brick Top, Gilt Edge, Hug, Pussy, Skinney, 
Deviator, Berg, Kemp, Chemistry, Dan, "Colonel" Forney, Ed, Cy, Juniper, 
Baby, Bill, Mac, Tommy, Mick, Kirk, Monk, Allentown Democrat, Editor, 
Rooster, Rummy, Jack, Venus., Portia, Doctor, Pete, Ike, Woe-unt-ye, Hen, 
Clubs, Virgin, Chaplain, Joe, Al, Lew, Dutchman, Hurm, Styx, Pappy, Pachy- 
derm, Wils, Paide, Still-liver, Nat, Ellie, Bridge Walker, Jersey, Gillard. Burt. 
Buck, Bergie, Stink Foot, Kit Carson, Drakie, Sleepy, Jack Frost, Lottie, Plank, 
Board, Missionary, Dad, Bags. 



'.14 



RAILROADS 



fJIfK.II VAI.M-V. 

TRAINS LEAVE EASTOK FOR 

PHILADELPHIA— 6.30, 8.00, 11.10 a. m: 3.00. 5.3.-). 7.35 p. sr. 

L & B. JUNCTION— 6.30 a. m. ; 3.50 P. M. 

ELMIRA, BUFFALO & NIAGARA FALLS— 10.05. 11.35 a. m. 

ALLENTOWN— 0.30. 8.00, 10.05. 11.35 a. m. ; 3.50. 7.35 P. m. 

HAZELTON, &c— 10.05 a. m.; 3.50 p. M. 

HARRISBURG. READING & WEST— 11.35 a. >i. ; 3.50. S.50 p. n 

READING, POTTS VILLE— 6.30 a. m. 

(i:\TBAL II All .ROAD OF N. 3. 

TRAINS LEAVE EASTON, L. & S DIVISION, FOR 

MAUCII CHUNK-6.00. 10.10. 11.45 a. m. : 3.55. 1.40 p. st. 

SCRANTON-6.00, 11.45 a. m. ; 3.55 P. m. 

NEW YORK— 6.30. 7.10, 0.00 a. at. : 1.00, 4.05, 6.00, 6.40. 

BELVIDERE AMU DELAWARE R. R. 

TRAINS LEAVE PHILIPSBURfl FOR 
PHILADELPHIA— 5.45, 7.50 a. m. : 1.43. 0.48 p. m. 



E A STON PO ST- O FFICE. 

ARRIVAL A^D DEPARTURE OF JIAI1,S. 

NEW YORK— Opens at 10.20 a. m., and 3.30 and 7.15 p. m.": ciose&'al 8;00 K: *r 

12.30 p. m., and 3.45 and 6.00 P. M.J 
PHILADELPHIA— Arrives 7.30, 10.20. 10.30 a. m.. 5.00 and 7.30 p. \r. : closes at 

7.15 and 0.30 a. m„ 1.00. 5.00 and 6.00 p. M. 
LEHIGH VALLEY R. R.— Arrives 7.30 a. m.. 1.00 and 7.00 p. m. ; doses 9.30 a. m_ 

and 3.20 p. m. 
BELVIDERE, DELAWARE R. R., Wat— Arrives at 10.40 a. m. ; closes 1.00 p. ». 
BELVIDERE, SCRANTON, STROUDSBOURG, &c. Arrives at 2.00 p. m.: doses 

at 10.(H) a. m. Through .Mail Arrives at s.oo a. vt. and 2.00 p. m. ; clones at 

<*.50 A. M.. 0.00 p. M. 

HARRISBURG, READING, &c, Way Mail Arrives at LOOP. M.; closes n 00 

A. M. 

MORRIS AND ESSEX R. R., Way M mi. Arrives 11.45 a. m. : closes IS 30 p. is. 
CENTRAL R. R., Wat Arrives 10.20 a. m. ; closes 8.20 v. m. 



Stylish and Substantial 

mmm i suiien 

*J- 4* #fe ■&< sfe «$» <?fe »& «& 

€J w if W ill ll ilw 4m 



FOR 



Gentlemen, Youths and Boys. 
PRICES ALWAYS MODERATE. 
K ii tire Satisfaction Guaranteed. 

Samples with Easy Rules for Self-Measuring sent to any 
address when written for. Special Department for Order 
work. Custom Department greatly enlarged and improved. 
Orders by Mail respectfully solicited. 

WANAMAKER & BROWN, 



The Largest Clothing=House in America, 

S. E. Corner of Sixth and Market Streets, 

VI IILADELPHIA. 



WILLIAM MAXWELL, 
N. E. CORNER CENTRE SQ., 

E ASTON, PA. 

Bookbinding & Ruling promptly attended to. 

MORTON'H GOLD X»:E]V.*-*, 



M. FRIEDLICH. 
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS, 

Fine Dress Shirts, 

Silk Umbrellas, 

Fancy Jewelry, 

Kid Cloves, 
A Specialty in Fine Neck Wear, 

ISo. Ii20 NORTHAMPTON ST., 

Next door to Rieffel's Bookstore. 



EDWARD ABLE'S 



■WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 



IMFIEI flAMPH m 



BRUSSELS, THREE-PLY k INGRAIN CARPETS, 

Druggets, Rugs, Matting, Table & Piano Covers, 

Stair, Table & Floor Oil Cloths, Stair Rods, &c, 

136 TS ORTHAMPTON ST. 

EASTON, PENN'A. 



SANDT & BECK, 

Cor. 41h and Northampton Streets, 



DEALERS L\ 



mm. 



UMBRELLAS, VALISES, CARPET BAGS, ETC., 

Also a full lints of 

Gents' Furnishing Goods. 
BECKER & RADER, 

DEALERS IN 

Sieiiiil p-wlwip, §^[.ricHltttvaI § wf Unvote, 

FURNACE AND RAILROAD SUPPLIES, 

Agents for Lafiin & Rand Powder Co. 
MILLER'S PATENT SOAP STONE PACKING, 

Cor. 4th «fc Northampton Sts., Easton, Pa. 



UNITS A MM» MP ALb & 



Made to order at the shortest notice, in the most approved style, 
and of the best material and workmanship. Good fitting work guaranteed. 

Repairing Done with Neatness and Dispatch, 

NO, 62 NORTH THIRD STREET, EASTON, PENN'A. 

J. F. McKEE, 

A. SPIELLER, 

Watch-Maker and Jeweler, 
No. 201 Northampton St., formerly 17 N. Third St., 

DEALER IN 

Watrbtf, Ktarfcfi Stltottmn mi guto**. 

Personal attention given to all kinds of reparing. 



14 



M. J. - RIEGEL, 

©tkssilif and Stationer, 

122 Northampton Street, 



E ASTON, PA. 
CLASSICAL BOOKS, 

SCHOOL, MISCELLANEOUS AND 

b l a. :isr K BOOKS, 

MATHEMATICAL INSTRUMENTS, 

DRAWING x\ND INITIAL PAPER, 

PICTURES FRAMED, 

GOLD PENS. 

Special, rates to Students on Text Books. 

^IST OI^lD ESTABLISHED 

©m@eisr & m@rai@ir si ©si, 

Ham, Egrg-s, Bread, Butter, i,ard, Cheese, 

Sugar, Coffee, Tea, Bice, Molasses, 

Always on Hand 
Fruits of all Kinds and in all Styles. 

TOBACCO AND SEKARS. 

Thankful for past patronage, I solicit the continuance of the same. 

±Z . S . BELL, 

Cor. 3d and Bushkill Streets. 



CAUTION TO THE PUBLIC. 

It having come to ray notice that some dealers are offering for sale inferior grades 
of SHOES, representing them to be of my manufacture, purchasers will please notice that 
hereafter all SHOES of my make will have my name stamped on the lining, also fac-similes of 
medal received at the Paris Exposition 1867, and the trade mark on the sole of each shoe. 

I have given to J. P. BALDWIN, (56 Northampton Street, the exclusive sale of my 
goods in Easton. * EDWIN C. BURT. 



• J. OSCAR WOLSLAYER, 

141 jSTorthampton Street, 



Dealer in all kind* of 



BOOTS AND SHOES, 

For Ladies', Gents' and Children, 

We employ the best workmen in Easton for Custom work, and give entire 

satisfaction in Durability, Style and Prices. We use the 

Invisible Patch in repairing. 



i> . b t_, a. c m , 

DEALER IN 

And a general assortment of Tinners' Supplies, 

MANUFACTURER OF 

COJPJPEIfc, XIIV «Ss SHEET IROIN WARE, 

PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO ROOFING. 

/ g3nt for the Reynolds Heater and Harrison Range. 
68 NORTHAMPTON ST., 

EASTOX, TA. 



SAMUEL STEM, 



DEALER US 



Choice Groceries & Provisions of all kinds, 

Foreign and Domestic Canned Fruits, Oils, Pickles and 

Sauces, Good Butter, Fine Peas of all grades, 

Selected by the best Judges, Fresh 

Roasted Coffees of 

all kinds. 

S. E. Cor. 2nd & NORTHAMPTON STS. 



MANUFACTURER OF AND DEALER IN 



mm, bamul fu;: 



AND 



HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS, 

Cor. Northampton and 2nd Streets, Easton, Pa. 



THE AMEEICAN. 




THE BEST AND MOST COMPLETE. 

It is the universal verdict, North, South, East and West — 
That the American Co.\s machines are the nearest infection of 
any machines in the world, performing the greatest range of 
work, and doing it with ease, in a beautiful, strong and efficient 
manner. The American 2s its own advertiser wherever it 
goes — winning its well-earned praise among families, and with 
manufacturers of every fabric which requires sewing. It does 
the whole range of plain sewing on every kind of material. It 
makes button-holes superior to any made by hand, and makes 
beautifid embroidery over the edge of garments. The construc- 
tion of its shuttle and bobbin is such that it works with less 
noise than any other shuttle machine, and has a perfectly even 
tension, easily adjusted to any kind of thread or work. Its feed 
is raised or lowered to suit any fabric. 

Be sure you examine this machine before purchasing any 
other — for no other machine will so thoroughly meet every want. 
'Sold on easy terms at Salesrooms, 1318 Chestnut Street, 
Philadelphia. 

Kr AGENTS WANTED FOR CITY AND COUNTRY. 

Address as a bore. 



JAMES HESS, 

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in 

HATS, CAPS, FURS, AND GLOVES, 

STORK AND FACTORY, 

No. ISO Northampton Street, 

EASTON, PA. 

FINE & PURCELL, 

DEALERS IN CHOICE 

Groceries, Teas, Coffees, Spices, 

FOREIGN AND ttOIWESFIC FRUITS, 

CANNED GOODS, Ac, 

FLOUR, FEED, AND GRAIN, 
COUNTRY PRODUCE A SPECIALTY. 

No, 71 NORTHAMPTON STREET, 

EASTOX, IP A. 



Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver & Plated Ware, 

TABLE CTJTJL,:EriY. 
No, 77 NOTlTllAMrTON STREET, 

EASTON, PA. 



AV . J E N N" I N G S , 

Manufacturer of Ladies & Gents' 

BOOTS, ®g®I®t ATD iMilll, 

Repairing Promptly attended t<>. 

Particular attention paic to Stnclei 
S. I'.. Cor. THIRD ANI> BUSHKILL STREETS, 
EASTON, PA. 



DATESMAN & ANGLE, 

Clothiers and Merchant Tailors, 

AND DEALERS IN 

Gents' Furniisliiiio- Grooclfs, 

53 NORTHAMPTON STREET. 



Has a larger circulation than any Daily published in the Lehigh Valley, 
and larger than any other Daily or Weekly combined published in Northampton 
County. 

Our Steam J oh ^Printing Eooms 

are the most extensive and complete in Easton. Good work at low prices is the 
motto, 

G. M. REEDER, 

EDITOR, PUBLISHES, & PROPRIETOR. 



BROADWELL, GONKLIN & CO., 

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 



Wm 

Cor. Northampton St., and Centre Square, 
EASTON, PA. 



STUDENTS/ GET FOCR 

BOOTS AND SHOES, 

AT 

No. 43 NORTH THIRD STREET. 

APPROVED STYLE, GOOD FIT, BEST MATERIAL, 
AND WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED. 



M^LX ¥IK. 



H. C. DAWES, 
J" IE "W IE Hi IE IR, 

Has constantly on hand the finest assortment of 

°^ V ' ' ts, €ktfa f lefoelm Silkr, 




AND SILVER PLATED WARE, 

To be found outside of the cities. 

Pays particular attention to Watch and all kinds of Repairing. 
All Work Warranted at 

57 Northampton Street, 

EASTON, PA. 

— - ■-,--- 

New Trade Palace. 

A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF 

DRY GOODS AND CARPETS 

Now Open, such as 

I $ras ioofos, Srtlhs, Sjptols, Jarasols, 

FANCY GOODS, Etc 

Also a large Stock of CARPETS, in English and American 
Tapestry, Brussels, Ingrain and Step Carpets. Oil Cloths, 
Window Shades, &c. 

ONE PRICE ONLY 

WM. LAUBACH, Proprietor. 



J. & W. FRAUNFELDER, 



DEALER IN 



Dry-Goods, Groceries, 

fine teas, coffees & spices, 

dried & canned fruits, 

flour, Hams, mackerel, 

floor oilcloth, 

Clubs and Families supplied on reasonable term*. 

COLLEGE HILL, 

EASTON. I* A.- 



&se§ $§ era* 

No. 194 Northampton Street, Easton, 

manufacture all the furniture they sell ; they can therefore 
warrant it all first quality. They have a large stock to select 
from. They sell cheaper than any other dealers in Easton, as 
they have reduced prices to suit the spring trade. 

Give them a call and see for yourself. 



P. F. EILENBERGER, 

Cor. 4th & Kortkampton Streets, 

A few doors above the Opern House. 

WW 5p> wt (f| *m® x gap ^P W M 'W # &fo 



A fine assortment of the latest styles of Clothes and Cassi- 
meres always in stock. Work made to order in the latest- 
style by a first-class cutter from the city. 



L. G. BURGESS & SON, 

10 PLAIN STREET, ALBANY, N.Y., 

Manufacturers of College Society Badges, Rings, 
» Buttons, Studs, Guard Pins, Charms, 



and a general line of Solid Jewelry required by Collegians. 
Monograms designed and cut in Gold, and Stone. Letter and 
Ornamental Engraving. 

We have had a large experience in the Badge line, our facili- 
ties are complete, and our trade extensive. 

We make Badges solely, and aim to supply our customers with 
first-class productions, giving equal attention to low and high 
prices. We work only solid gold at 14, 16 and 18 carats. Tn 
Badge setting we use Garnet, Jet, Turquoise, Pearl, Amethyst, 
Ruby, Opal, Emerald, Sapphire, Diamond, in both close and 
crown settings. 

Aware that Collegians generally prefer symmetrical, substan- 
tial, stylish Budges, we solicit their orders, confident that, in a 
comparison of our goods with those of other houses, we cannot 
be the losers. 

IS^l^C H. SMITH, 

Wholesale and retail dealer in 



Personal attention given and $ati«faetioii 
guaranteed. 



ARNOLD & BISSEL'S 

POPULAR 

Porter's Block, S. 3d St., Eastcn, Pa. 

If* GENTLEMEN WILL FIND EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS SALOON 
IN PERFECT ORDER. 

HOT, COLD. AM) BHOWflR BATHS \\A. HOURS OJT D W AND lOVKMNU. 

Arnold's Celebrated Glycerine Compound always on hand tor sal*'. 
The Patronage of a 1 .! is respetcfully Solicited. 






STOS. l)Att¥, 

BATTER, 



AND 

Dealer in all kinds of Hats and Caps. 

The finest and most fashionable kinds kept on hand and 
made to order. Also on hand a fine line of fancy and cheap 
Umbrellas, Canes, Travelling Bags and Cabos. 

All in want of anything in the above line will do well to 
call on us at 

No. 13 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Easton, Pa. 



KELLER'S ICE-CREAM GARDEN. 

OPEN FOE THE SEASON. 

Ice-creams of all Flavors. Families, Parties. Weddings 
and Picnics supplied with cream on short notice. 

Special attention to getting up Suppers for Private Parties, 
College Fraternities and Classes. Also Table Boarders taken 
at reasonable rates. 

Cor. Front and Spring Garden Sts., 

EASTOIN, JPA. 



STUDENTS' HEAD QUARTERS. 

Walk in gentlemen, walk n at E. D. MILLAKD'S, 
Cor. 3rd & Bushkill, where you can find almost anything 
you need to eat or use ; Bowls and Pitchers, Lamps and 
Chimneys, Cans, and Oil, Cakes and Crackers, Nuts and 
Fruits of all kinds in season, Brooms and Brushes, Milk 
and Sweet Cider and Spruce Peer, Buckets, Dippers and 
Tumblers, Cigars and Tobacco. Call and see us every time. 



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